Atrocious (film)

Atrocious is a 2010 Spanish horror film, written and directed by Fernando Barreda Luna, that was released in the United States (US) on August 17, 2011.[1]

Atrocious
Theatrical release poster
Directed byFernando Barreda Luna
Produced byJessica Villegas
David Sanz
Written byFernando Barreda Luna
StarringCristian Valencia
Clara Moraleda
Rafael Amaya
Production
company
Programa Ibermedia
Nabu Films
Silencio Rodamos
Distributed byBloody Disgusting
The Collective
Release date
  • October 15, 2010 (2010-10-15) (Sitges Film Festival)
Running time
75 minutes
CountrySpain
LanguageSpanish

The film relays the story of two siblings during an Easter holiday at their family's country house in Sitges; the brother decides to investigate a local urban legend involving the ghost of a missing girl named Melinda.

The film was released as part of the Bloody Disgusting Selects line.

Plot

Cristian Quintanilla (Cristian Valencia) and his sister July (Clara Moraleda)[2] have a web-show of paranormal investigations covering urban legends. When they are invited to spend the Easter holidays at the family's summer home, they intend to investigate the story of Melinda, a girl that went missing in 1940 and supposedly haunts the woods. Cristian and July spend a great deal of time wandering around the hedge maze there with their video cameras. Their father reveals that their mother once knew the maze quite well in her youth.

Upon finding a well in the maze, Cristian leans into it and calls Melinda's name. July chastises him for being disrespectful. The morning after, their dog goes missing and Cristian and July eventually find him dead at the bottom of the well. That night, the mother enters their room, screaming that their younger brother José has gone missing. When she and the two children head for the maze to search for him, they are separated. Eventually, Cristian finds July, tied to the pillars of a small gazebo, bleeding profusely. He leads her back to the house, where they find José's burnt body in the fireplace. Hearing noises outside, July hides in a kitchen cupboard, while Cristian goes to the front door. An axe blade bursts through the door and Cristian runs upstairs to hide.

The next morning, Cristian goes downstairs to find the kitchen cupboard empty and drenched in blood. Down in the basement he finds an old video recorder playing. It is a tape of his mother being interviewed in a mental institution by her doctors. They mention that schizophrenic episodes in adolescent women have a tendency to reoccur, and that night can bring them on. It is established that Cristian and July once had a baby sister named Michelle and that their mother had a psychotic break as the result of postpartum depression and killed her. The mother blames the episodes on a woman named Elvira, about whom the doctors question her.

As Cristian watches this tape, his mother comes up behind him and slaughters him with an axe. Five days later, the police find the bodies of the Quintanilla family and recover the video footage shot by Cristian and July.

Reception

The film has received mixed reviews, with Rotten Tomatoes listing 18 reviews, 56% of which are favorable.[3] Bill Gibron of PopMatters gave it seven of ten stars, concluding: "Thankfully, writer/director Fernando Barreda Luna knows enough about building suspense to overcome the movie's many shortcomings."[4]

gollark: People don't *agree* on what it is.
gollark: Yes.
gollark: Which you can simply not have.
gollark: Nuclear power (well, not "RTGs in all portable devices" nuclear power) is already fine cancerwise, since it doesn't really cause any outside of accidents.
gollark: Yes.

See also

  • Found footage (pseudo-documentary)

References

  1. Jason Buchanan (2012). "Atrocious (2010)". Rovi. Rovi Corporation. Archived from the original on 30 October 2011. Retrieved 26 August 2012.
  2. The NYC Movie Guru (17 August 2011). "Atrocious". The NYC Movie Guru. The NYC Movie Guru. Retrieved 26 August 2012.
  3. "Atrocious (2011)". Rotten Tomatoes. Retrieved June 10, 2020.
  4. Gibron, Bill (August 12, 2011). "Found Fright: 'Atrocious'". PopMatters. Retrieved 2011-08-19.
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