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Der dunkelste Ort ist im Inneren …
East London, 1974. Während sich das ganze Land auf eine flächendeckende Stromsperre vorbereitet, erscheint die angehende Krankenschwester Val zu ihrem ersten Arbeitstag in einem alten Krankenhaus. Da die meisten Patienten bereits evakuiert worden sind, findet sich Val bei ihrer ersten Nachtschicht in einem düsteren, fast verlassenen Gebäude wieder. Doch ein abgründiges Geheimnis verbirgt sich hinter diesen Mauern. In der Dunkelheit muss sich Val ihren tiefsten Ängsten stellen und einer bösartigen Kraft entgegentreten.
Avis de la communauté (8)
Not particularly scary though it is topical. There is more than the supernatural power at play here, and the real meaning behind the title will resonate more than the ghost within the darkness.
I just had a coffee yet this movie had its way to put me to sleep. That's the power! The Power doesn't offer anything different or fresh to the genre. I'd say it's just too similar, it's tiring. It's a blend between psychological and supernatural. It has a typical setting for a horror movie, hospital and darkness which successfully create the grim and chilling atmosphere. Set in 1974, it uses the electrical black-out led by the government which really happen at that time in attempt to elevate its mediocre premise and predictable twist. It relies on how well can you see in the dark technique and some cheap jumpscares to scare the audience. Rose Williams and Shakira Rahman played the role quite well. It has a great message about the abuse of power but it's not as genuine and powerful as it's intended. Like it's a last minute thing and they just put it there. Unfortunately, I didn't really enjoy this one.
It was very atmospheric and tense. What I really like about it is that despite being very dark a lot of the time, they didn't resort to cheap jump scares. I was pleasantly surprised.
Like listening to a radio in the bathtub, you know what's going to happen but you still feel the shock. The first half of the film drags under the weight of clunky exposition and clichéd jump scares, but the second half picks up as the story grows legs and takes off. The success of the film, such as it is, owes a great debt to Rose Williams whose mastery of the gamut of emotions shown by her character would garner her awards in a more just world.
The power referred to in the title has to do with the abuse of power in a horror movie with a #metoo message that doesn't find the way to express itself. Using the blackouts caused by the English government to save energy in 1973 as a setting for a horror movie is smart. But it is, like almost everything in the movie, underused in favor of a conventional story that only finds a glimmer of quality in Rose Williams ("Sanditon").