The best horror movie in years is out on DVD and Blu-ray today

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      Horror fans who haven't seen It Follows yet should get their butts down to wherever it is they buy movies because it's out on DVD and Blu-ray today.

      And it's the best scary flick since 2012's The Cabin in the Woods.

      In case you missed it, here's my review from four months ago:

      Every once in a while a low-budget indie fright flick comes along that makes everything on the major studios’ horror plate look like a pile of steaming crap. It Follows is that film, right now.

      Maika Monroe is note-perfect as Jay, a pretty 19-year-old college student getting by in her average Motor City life. But while they’re out on a date, her new boyfriend, Hugh (Jake Weary), chloroforms her after sex in the back seat of his car and binds her to a wheelchair in her undies in the middle of an abandoned parking structure.

      Just when you fear that It Follows might turn into yet another gruelling Hostel-type torture-porn epic, we learn that Hugh has only restrained Jay so that he can explain something very important to her. When she comes to, he wheels her around until they spy a naked woman in the distance, shuffling toward them. “This thing, it’s gonna follow you,” he warns. “Somebody gave it to me, and I passed it to you.”

      Hugh tells Jay that she can only rid herself of the “follower” by sleeping with someone, but fails to mention that, while slow-moving, it’s powerful enough to rip her limbs off. The rest of the film is a terrifying portrayal of the goodhearted girl’s ordeal as she tries to save herself from the converging ghouls—visible only to her (and us)—without bringing death to those around her.

      Writer-director David Robert Mitchell takes the puzzling premise of It Follows and runs it straight into your nightmares. He’s aided by a standout cast of young actors whose naturalistic performances play out against an eerie-as-hell soundtrack by Disasterpeace that echoes the spooky ’70s-style synth work used in drive-in movies by the likes of Goblin, Tangerine Dream, and John Carpenter.

      Depressing footage of a decaying Detroit heightens the sense of hopelessness that fuels the engine of fear propelling It Follows, which ultimately leaves you heavy with dread and the notion that it’s the finest horror flick you’ve seen in years.

      Comments

      1 Comments

      Really??

      Jul 15, 2015 at 6:11am

      You must've watched a different movie than I did. After 30 minutes I was tempted to walk out of the theater. The premise of a curse - if you will - having to be passed on to someone else before dying was an intriguing concept. However, sex being the only means of transfer was silly. The same scenario replays over and over for the duration of the film; which literally feels like an eternity. Considering the amount of sarcastic comments followed by laughing by the audience after it ended, I thought for sure this movie would disappear quickly. But for some reason, there are others like you out there who thought this was a great film. The only reason for this that I can think of is that the "horror" films of the past 10 years have been terrible overall; possibly creating such a deep yearning for something good that you chose this film as the savior. My rating : D-