Cursed |  | Director: Wes Craven Actors: Christina Ricci, Jesse Eisenberg, Portia de Rossi, Mya, Shannon Elizabeth Category: DVD
Buy New: $3.99 as of 3/20/2010 17:31 EDT details
New (7) Used (4) from $3.95
Seller: inetvideo Rating: 203 reviews Sales Rank: 194096
Format: NTSC Language: English (Unknown) Rating: Unrated Region: 1 Running Time: 97 Minutes Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.2 Dimensions (in): 7.1 x 5.4 x 0.6
UPC: 065935209072 EAN: 0065935209072 ASIN: B0009F2BGW
Theatrical Release Date: February 25, 2005 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
| |
| Similar Items:
| |
| Editorial Reviews:
Amazon.com When you consider its unfortunate production history, Cursed turned out surprisingly well as a werewolf thriller that horror buffs will appreciate. It's hardly the disaster critics made it out to be, but extensive rewriting, reshooting, recasting, and lengthy delays in production and release (including the elimination of R-rated gore to earn a PG-13 rating) clearly took their toll. The result is a fun but flawed monster-show that begins when a young talk-show producer (Christina Ricci) and her teenaged brother (Jesse Eisenberg) are bitten by a werewolf, setting the stage for a horror-in-Hollywood scenario that reunites director Wes Craven and screenwriter Kevin Williamson, creators of the Scream franchise. What could have been a classic horror comedy is instead a fairly solid, if unremarkable, exercise in Los Angeles lycanthropy, featuring werewolf makeup by Rick Baker (combined with CGI transformation effects, of course) and some of Williamson's snappy dialogue and trademark pop-culture references. The title of Cursed doubles as a description of this movie's ultimate fate, but in a market filled with straight-to-video horror fodder, it's anything but a lost cause. The supporting cast includes Shannon Elizabeth, Portia de Rossi and Joshua Jackson, so genre aficionados should definitely check it out. --Jeff Shannon
|
| Customer Reviews:
Showing reviews 1-5 of 203
Great! March 14, 2010 Carolyn Laws Faktor (AL) I got this for my daughter for her psp. It came within a week of ordering it and I loved that. She was watchingit that day! A defiante watch for all horror fans!
"Great Fun" March 4, 2010 Terry Richard (Fredericton, New Brunswick, Canada) An above average horror film, "Cursed" tells the story about a bunch of young people living in Los Angeles and becoming werewolves. The story sounds asinine, but the plot really works thanks to a strong script by horror genius Kevin Williamson, and the fantastic direction of Wes Craven. The actors are also exceptional, featuring performances by Christina Ricci, Joshua Jackson, and Shannon Elizabeth. "Cursed" was a big hit when released to theatres in 2005. In this special edition DVD two extra minutes were added to the final cut that features some graphic violence deemed too extreme for movie audiences. Scary, hair-raising, and a roller-coaster ride make "Cursed" a film that you shouldn't watch alone!
Lowered Expectations... November 26, 2009 Bindy Sue Frønkünschtein (under the rubble) 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
I avoided seeing CURSED for years, after hearing all of the talk about just how terrible it was. So, I finally got hold of a copy and watched it last night, figuring that I was about to witness a total catastrophe. Well, perhaps it was my extremely low expectations, but I actually enjoyed it! While it's certainly no GINGER SNAPS or AN AMERICAN WEREWOLF IN LONDON, CURSED isn't the disastrous failure I'd heard about. Christina Ricci (Addams Family 1 and 2, Sleepy Hollow, Monster, The Gathering) plays her lead role w/ ease and humour. She is a gothic chick without even having to work at it! Her features alone make her the next Barbara Steel! CURSED also has a decent plot and pacing. The CGI transformation effects are passable, but still make me mourn for the days of latex! The cast, apart from Ms. Ricci, is typical Craven / Williamson, mostly young, shallow, yet beautiful people. CURSED also has far fewer in-jokes and less self-aware humour than the SCREAM films. So, it's a fairly straightforward werewolf movie. If you love Christina Ricci, werewolves, or Wes Craven, then CURSED should give you a boost...
one star for the effects, one for the cast.. October 27, 2009 ribcage (Lantana, Florida United States) Cursed is a disappointing, formulaic horror movie (complete with ample references to classic horror films that did not use this formula) that highlights once again that Wes Craven somewhere in the 90s ushered any real talent he had out the door.
Looking at the production history should be the first clue to what to expect out of this film. A handful of actors dropped out, after already having shot scenes, requiring on the fly re-writes and re-shoots causing the movie to be delayed at least a year. Sets for a finale in a wax musuem get cannibalised into a club...with wax musuem exhibits. Go figure.
But, you may argue, this can be balanced out by looking at the remaining cast, most of whom are stellar actors and actresses. Except that you can stuff whoever you want into your story, if it's bad it stays bad.
The story follows Elli (Christina Ricci) and her brother Jimmy (Jesse Eisenberg) who through a horrendous car accident down a hill that follows in an animal attack, as they realise they have become afflicted with the curse of the werewolf and their efforts to find the person who bite them so they can be cured by killing them. Which means, of course, that one of the many random characters all over the movie is going to be a werewolf, and at least one will be a red herring, and by the time it all unravels the viewer will have just watched a terrible film.
The story bumbles through Jimmy trying to convince Elli that they are indeed werewolves while both of them experience changes to themselves while still trying to continue with their lives. (In fact, they're so determined to continue with their lives that the morning after the car accident where they witnessed a girl mutilated by an animal, Jimmy is telling Elli of the werewolf lore and she tells him claiming to be a werewolf is no excuse to get out of school. Forget the fact that they just saw someone die horribly a few hours ago, the two don't even really give her death a second thought.) As such, we see too much of their lives interspersed with what's actually some pretty good werewolf scenes, but not a lot of them. Which is sad because these werewolves were VERY good looking, and their scenes were the only ones with any kind of reasonable pacing.
So it slowly, slowly builds to its predictable end, a werewolf crawls on the ceiling for some reason, and all that's missing out of the generic horror formula is a surprise "IT'S NOT OVER!" ending.
I guess they weren't counting on a sequel to this one.
A Werewolf Movie Without Bite September 24, 2009 Richard Ross 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
Jimmy (Jesse Eisenberg) and Ellie (Christina Ricci) are a pair of orphaned siblings living in Hollywood. Jimmy is still in high school and a frequent target for a jock (Milo Ventimiglia)'s homophobic slurs. Ellie is an intern for the Craig Kilborn show (this film isn't dated at all). One night while driving home on Mulholland Drive they get into a car accident and in the ensuing chaos both get bitten by a large animal. Jimmy believes it to be a werewolf but both Ellie and the cops think it's his overactive imagination. The next morning when Jimmy wakes up naked in the bushes and Ellie develops a craving for blood she begins to rethink her brothers' claim. After doing some investigating she learns that her and Jimmy have been cursed by the mark of the beast and that the only way to reverse it is to kill the werewolf who gave it to them. The two siblings spend the remainder of the film trying to figure out which one of the colorful characters populating their lives is actually a werewolf. Their search includes Ellie's womanizing boyfriend (Joshua Jackson), a psycho publicist (Judy Greer), a goofy gypsy (Portia DeRossi) and Scott Baio as himself. The film is fun in a campy sort of way but that isn't enough to sustain it. This is both confusing and disappointing since the creators, Wes Craven and Kevin Williamson, are the two men responsible for re-inventing the teen horror genre with 'Scream'. The script has none of Williamson's clever satire or Craven's skill at orchestrating suspenseful tension. Instead they rely on shots of their KNB created werewolf baring it's sharp teeth and plenty of gushing blood to provide the scares. There are some fun moments in the performances and what little satire there is is appreciated, but 'Cursed' is a disappointing effort from both men.
Showing reviews 1-5 of 203
|
|
|