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Movie Title : House at the End of the Street
Release Date : Sep 21, 2012 Wide Genre Movie :Mystery & Suspense,Horror
Mpaa Rating : PG-13 Actors :Jennifer Lawrence,Elisabeth Shue,Max Thieriot,Gil Bellows,Eva Link,Nolan Gerard Funk,Allie MacDonald,Jordan Hayes,Krista Bridges,James Thomas,Hailee Sisera,Craig Eldridge,Jonathan Higgins,Oliver Soul,Lori Anne Alter,Joy Tanner,Bobby Osborne,Gracie Tucker,Will Seatle Bowes,Jon McLaren
Visitor Ranting & Critics For House at the End of the Street
User Ranting Movie House at the End of the Street : 3.1User Count Like for House at the End of the Street : 50,259
Critics Ranting For House at the End of the Street : 3.7
Critics Percentage For House at the End of the Street : 11 %
Trailer For House at the End of the Street
TagLine House at the End of the Street Just so you know...they're sorry for anything that's about to happen.Review For Movie House at the End of the Street
Shockingly uneventful, this horror film marks time until dropping its big, dumb reveal.A.A. Dowd-Time Out New York
A choppily edited, poorly timed mess with little continuity, overloaded with aural shocks in a desperate attempt to compensate for its minimal suspense.
Stephen Holden-New York Times
Tonderai steers the story cleanly around its queasy hairpin turns, perversely toying with one of pop cinema's most cherished clichés: the audience's inculcated desire to side with the underdog.
Nick Pinkerton-Village Voice
There are one or two clever plot twists that are subsequently followed up by a cavalcade of ridiculous, credibility-stretching ones.
Alonso Duralde-The Wrap
What could be so bad about a new Jennifer Lawrence movie that its distributor opts to keep it away from critics and release it with minimal ad support? Please, allow "House at the End of the Street" to answer that question.
Mark Olsen-Los Angeles Times
This is the rare horror film so bad you almost wish it had turned into a good old connect-the-gory-dots slasher movie. The only mystery at work is how Lawrence's agent ever let her sign on.
Owen Gleiberman-Entertainment Weekly
A clunky, run-of-the-mill horror flick written by the same guy who penned last year's similarly themed disappointment, Dream House.
Steve Newton-Georgia Straight
It isn't very scary, but it does pile a bunch of really tasteless twists on towards the end that make no sense and it almost becomes a comedy. On one hand, is a failure as a horror film, but as an exercise in desperation, it's kind of a hoot
Eric Melin-Scene-Stealers.com
exactly what you'd expect from a PG-13 horror movie dropped in September. There's really nothing particularly scary about it, and the story ranges from shaky to thin
Kevin Carr-7M Pictures
House at the End of the Street is nothing more than a lazily-written horror film that falls back on every cliche possible while failing to provide any scares in the process.
Jeff Beck-We Got This Covered
House at the End of the Street reveals itself to be merely another forgettable PG-13 thriller banking on the brain-dead mall crowd to tweet their unending love for a crummy feast such as this.
Jeremy Wheeler-TV Guide's Movie Guide
The screenplay has a nice twist that could have supported a stylish giallo-style thriller; unfortunately, director Mark Tonderai delivers a mess -- an almost random tangle of choppy edits, handheld camera, 'shock' sound effects and other horror cliches.
John Beifuss-Commercial Appeal (Memphis, TN)
Formulaic, unoriginal suspense thriller aided by a plot twist and good leads, that might delight the less-gore-is-more teenage audience.
Bruce Bennett-Spectrum (St. George, Utah)
A routine 'Don't go down to the basement' thriller, but watching Jennifer Lawrence go through her paces makes it enjoyable.
Jackie K. Cooper-jackiekcooper.com
The filmmakers elect to emphasize every plot point and telegraph every plot twist with the delicacy of a train blaring its horn as it approaches a crossing -- and yet that isn't even their greatest sin.
Matt Brunson-Creative Loafing
Borrows so liberally from other movies that it could have been fascinating, but due to confused direction and a mishmash of acting, it's ultimately bland and forgettable.
Sandy Schaefer-ScreenRant
Lawrence is fine as the solo-parented teen and Thieriot does a mean Tony Perkins (circa Pretty Poison, but on downers), but the sheer tedium of the storyline means you never really care about any of them.
Marc Savlov-Austin Chronicle
[T]he scariest thing about [this] is that this sort of junk is considered a good career move for a young actress who's just come off a small film from a respected indie director...
MaryAnn Johanson-Flick Filosopher
Saying that House at the End of the Street is contrived is an insult to contrivances.
Ken Hanke-Mountain Xpress (Asheville, NC)
... Typical of modern horror movies, jump-scares (which are startling, not scary--there is a difference) sprinkled throughout deflate the suspense before it builds much.
Greg Maki-Star-Democrat (Easton, MD)
Clearly designed as a downbeat, character-driven psychological thriller, not a shock machine...but it never really pays off, in part because it relies too often on the very clichés it aspires to avoid.
Maitland McDonagh-Film Journal International
Don't be tempted to put in an offer; this house is built on flimsy foundations.
Dafydd Goff-Guardian [UK]
You've seen every twist and turn before and it's all played completely straight. A Scream-esque knowing wink would make it all far more palatable.
Henry Northmore-The List
Its talented lead is reduced to being just another scantily clad babe getting stalked by a psycho.
Neil Smith-Total Film
A "sleepover night" horror movie made for young people who haven't seen many good horror movies.
Scott Weinberg-FEARnet
Movie Images House at the End of the Street
Movie Overview For House at the End of the Street
It's a drug that promises an out-of-body experience with each hit. On the street they call it Soy Sauce, and users drift across time and dimensions. But some who come back are no longer human. Suddenly a silent otherworldly invasion is underway, and mankind needs a hero. What it gets instead is John and David, a pair of college dropouts who can barely hold down jobs. Can these two stop the oncoming horror in time to save humanity? No. No, they can't.TagLine House at the End of the Street Just so you know...they're sorry for anything that's about to happen.
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