Lights Out

  • USA Lights Out (more)
Trailer 2

Plots(1)

After her husband is killed in a mysterious accident at work, Sophie (Maria Bello) becomes mentally unstable and disturbed and spends much of her time communicating with an imaginary friend that lurks in the darkness. When her behaviour begins to affect her son Martin (Gabriel Bateman), his older sister Rebecca (Teresa Palmer), who remembers their awful home life all too well, offers to shelter him in her apartment to keep him out of harm's way. With the reluctant help of her boyfriend Bret (Alexander DiPersia), Rebecca tries to uncover the mystery behind the entity her mother calls Diana as she researches her mother's past in a mental institution. But it seems Diana has now made Rebecca a target of her attacks when the lights go out. (Warner Bros. Home Entertainment)

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Trailer 2

Reviews (8)

Malarkey 

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English As a small-scale film, this movie is quite fine. What’s also fine however is how the director took the original idea, which had been made into a short film, and managed to turn it into a feature film. It’s nothing complicated, but it works. It’s not silly at all. People behave the way real people do rather than behaving like rubber figurines on paper. So, all in all? A pleasant horror movie surprise – it won’t offend you and while it won’t make you excited either, it gets the mission fulfilled with a full number of survivors. ()

POMO 

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English It’s a shame that this movie follows the genre template too closely, working with overused clichés, and has the runtime of a Leslie Nielsen comedy. And it’s too bad that the characters are underdeveloped. The monster Diane has much greater potential, as she is scarier than anything from James Wan’s masterpieces. The scenes with her escalate from continuous goose bumps to a very intense climax. ()

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lamps 

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English You can't shine a light. We’ve probably never had a similarly intense and original scare in cinemas, and in today's horror competition, it's hard to imagine a more effective way to make the audience's return home through darkened streets as unpleasant as possible. It goes full speed ahead from the start and, without any unnecessary talk, we are served an intelligent horror plot spiced up with such a thick atmosphere and such a scary monster that I would grunt with joy if I didn't have my vocal cords clenched with nervousness. Plus the flawless escalation, thanks to which the evil doesn't stop scaring even towards the end, the reasonable runtime and of course the absolutely disarming beauty of Terasa Palmer, thanks to whom I didn't breathe even in the less tense scenes. Pointless to complain and whine, that's all we can ask for. ()

Othello 

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English Already running out of funny ideas for how to describe these boogeyman in da house horror movies for a first date. At the very least, the darkness-addicted villain theme could have made for an interesting filmmaking challenge, where you could have played an action game with the protagonists with cones of light in the style of PC games like Alan Wake, which the lazy filmmakers probably didn't feel like doing, so they repeat the one trick of approaching evil in a flickering environment. It would have been cool to see how Buster Keaton would have handled a similar plot. ()

kaylin 

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English It seems that simplicity holds power, and that's why the creators of the film chose to take the straightforward path. The story about something lurking in the darkness, whether seen or unseen in the first scene, is harsh, eerie, and unsettling. Yes, it truly seems deceptively simple at first glance, but the creators managed to frighten the audience, and I commend them for that. ()

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