Reviews (2)
This gothic horror film relies on the atmosphere created mainly by great cinematography and equally great music (Simon Boswell is already a classic in the horror genre). A group of young people on a van drive through a barrier and get lost. Fog, mist, endless fog, a horse-drawn hearse and a church built on the site of a cemetery. Next door, however, is an inn that offers not only food but also the chance to win treasure if you spend the night in the underground crypt. Cobwebs, rats, spiders, bones, skeletons and reanimated corpses. The youngsters don't know if this is reality or a nightmare, but they know they must find a way out. A great decadent feast, a smiling flying living corpse. The awesome make-up effects are a dark pearl on the story that mostly takes place in a gorgeous underground setting that would be the envy of many a horror movie... Possible spoiler: I would have liked the ending to be in the vein of Carnival of Souls. ()
Graveyard Disturbance is a film that impresses with its surprisingly good masks, but they aren't that crucial for individual scenes and are just visually striking. The finale might be somewhat surprising, though it remains in the spirit of gothic horror. Graveyard Disturbance is a film intended more for radical fans of Italian cinema, as I don't think this horror has the potential to appeal to anyone else. ()
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