Angela Vidal craves a sensation, so she works tirelessly. Today she's shooting a story about firefighters. First, ask about the general way of life in the night shift, what they eat, what they do. But then there's a call to help some woman who's locked herself in an apartment and can't get out. Angela goes in search of sensation to the place. But she does not know what awaits her in this sinister house.
As I said, the film is very strange and personally controversial for me. It's like a documentary. We see everything happening from the lens of the camera, which shoots the report of Angela. On the one hand, this is good, as it gives more realism to this film. Makes it even scarier, adds an oppressive atmosphere, zombies become more alive (although they are already dead by definition). The downside is that the film loses all its life. If you are constantly waiting for someone to jump out of the corner, eat someone, spill blood from somewhere, and so on, then this effect automatically disappears. Personally, I was disgusted to watch the movie. It was very vividly shown there. In some places, the film resembled the recent penny creation of the British “Colin”. There was the same “meat” there. You can also recall the very recent “N9 District”, with its simply disgusting scenes, but there was a more less acceptable plot, unlike this film. Despite the fact that the film is negligible, only about one hour and fifteen minutes, but I, frankly, it was very difficult to watch it until the end. Of course, the escalatory atmosphere slowly held, but the development of the plot was so slow for such a short film. All this could be in a ten-minute short film fit, but the creators decided to make a full-length picture.
The movie is more than weird. I had different feelings, but most of them were negative. It's still documentary, but it's still a movie, not a news report. It's not my movie, it's not my movie. Original