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Produced by Steven Spielberg, this hugely successful horror flick apparently came under his directorial control, as well, despite the official credit being given to Tobe Hooper. Things start going bump in the night in a suburban home, much to the consternation of its resident family. When the youngest daughter gets sucked into the television screen, her parents call in an eccentric psychic for assistance. (Warner Bros. Home Entertainment)

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D.Moore 

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English It's rare that anything good ever comes out of a television. The atmosphere of the first half is amazing (though Spielberg and Hooper could have done without the tree), but the second half not so much. You have to shake your head at times at the behavior of the characters, especially when they voluntarily decide to spend one more night in the house, and sometimes it's a bit too far-fetched (the clown), yet the pros still win out. I bet on the fact that Spielberg started writing the script for Amazing Stories, but he was sorry to have to cut it short, so he put Poltergeist in a drawer for a while (hehe). I think you can tell which scenes he shot (the best ones, like the night visit) and which ones Hooper shot. What pleasantly surprised me was the breezy black humor when the professionals arrived at the house and the performance by little Jobeth Williams.__P.S. Jerry Goldsmith did great again, and the American anthem is even more frightening than normal. ()

Kaka 

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English The film has an excellent technical side (where Spielberg's work is most visible) and the nomination for visual and sound effects is, in my opinion, absolutely deserved. The ending is literally a whirlwind of directorial ideas, various visual tricks, and throughout the film, we can see scenes masterfully set with lights. Maybe if it had a faster pace, I would have pressed for a higher rating. ()

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lamps 

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English I can't believe that this is truly the work of the same Tobe Hooper who in 1974 enveloped the world in a cloud of fear in the form of The Texas Chainsaw Massacre. This is nothing but a one-off and desperately boring farce whose main goal was probably to scare you with the sight of a buzzing TV set. Anyway, the effects were very impressive, especially towards the end, and even Goldsmith's music had something to it, but all the good stuff ends up in a head-scratching story with a terrible bad ending, something I definitely wouldn't expect from a Spielberg-influenced horror film. Such sloppy wasted potential should perhaps be punished. ()

Matty 

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EnglishThey're here.” Poltergeist is a strangely disjointed horror movie that initially ridicules a model 1980s yuppie family and their lifestyle (rationality, pragmatism, disconnection from nature, which then strikes back in the form of intrusive mosquitoes and man-eating trees), but then, through that same family’s misfortune, defends the values on which Reagan’s America stood (the use of paranormal phenomena as the impetus to return the characters to a time when they still “believed in miracles”, as Diane says, is ambiguous). Similarly, the film is unclear as to whether viewers should fear or sympathise with the ghosts, because they are – according to the clairvoyant – so alone. Perhaps both, except that the transitions from family-friendly entertainment, keeping us under the illusion that nothing is really happening, to brutal horror, with characters peeling the skin off their faces (resembling a cut of meat that they were getting ready to consume, which I’m not sure was meant to be some sort of sophisticated critique of consumerism), manifested also in the changing style (urgent details vs. units with multiple plans of action), are not very subtle. The film is not balanced either rhythmically (its pace is slowed by long explanatory passages, the narrative continues in a “set time” after everything essential has been said) or in terms of tricks (some are still impressive, while others, like the digital tornado, are laughable). Though Poltergeist contains the best of both Steven Spielberg and Tobe Hooper’s work, it fails to combine the two approaches in a way that doesn’t seem irritating. 70% ()

DaViD´82 

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English An excellent family Spielberg horror that even children can watch. Well, I´m not completely sure. If I had watched this one at the age of six or seven, so I would have never been willing to sleep in my bed alone anymore. However, the film could have been much better if it had not been so intoxicated by the technical achievements and did not use effects only for effects´ sake, which today, however, inevitably seem ridiculous. What it lacks is timelessness and this disturbs the otherwise carefully constructed atmosphere. At the same time, when the creators are content with the murmur of television, the blue light behind the door, they sensitively know their parents about "Beast Behind the Curtain", a motionless clown toy by the crib (with an intruder poster in the background), Goldsmith's music. Practical effects or directly human remains, so it can be impressive even today. There is simply a certain contradiction in this, which is clearly seen in many aspects. This is most noticeable in the final half hour, when the regular final (Aťka Janoušková versus From beyond) and the closing take place. But instead of subtitles, the second part follows in the form of the second regular final, which, however, is made in a completely different mode. And both are excellent, although I much prefer the second one. The poltergeist should have been shorter, to rely less on "CGI" effects, and not to have such a noticeable discrepancy between Hooper's and Spielberg's visions. Even so (or because of that,) it is still a movie that you can easily find in every good ranking of the most important genre films. And there´s a clear reason for that. ()

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