㆗Pirate Bay㆙ Watch Antrum: The Deadliest Film Ever Made


Brief=Refusing to accept that his recently euthanased dog, Maxine, is now burning in the pits of Hell, devastated young Nathan finds himself tormented by constant nightmares and infernal visions. To ease his suffering, Nathan's older sister, Oralee, takes him on a trip to the grim woods to find the fabled spot where Lucifer himself fell to Earth when he was cast out of Heaven, and open a portal to the unknown. Now, bent on rescuing the dead dog's soul, the determined siblings follow the unholy instructions of a genuine grimoire, digging their way through the inner layers of the netherworld. However, as they delve deeper and deeper into the cursed realm, disturbing incidents start to occur, as dark signs tell the unprotected explorers of the supernatural to leave while they still can. Is Oralee's mind playing tricks on her? Have they unearthed, indeed, Hell's unfathomable secrets?; 95 minutes; Creator=Michael Laicini; Actor=Rowan Smyth; Canada; average Ratings=5,4 of 10

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Critics Consensus No consensus yet. 75% TOMATOMETER Total Count: 8 51% Audience Score User Ratings: 43 Antrum: The Deadliest Film Ever Made Ratings & Reviews Explanation Antrum: The Deadliest Film Ever Made Photos Movie Info Antrum, a feature length film shot in the late 1970's, is said to be cursed. In 1988, a movie theatre in Budapest that was screening the film burnt to the ground, killing the 56 people who were in attendance. This incident follows the inexplicable deaths of a number of film festival programmers that had received Antrum as a submission and died shortly after watching it. These events have created a belief that watching Antrum will kill you. Else Films has successfully tracked down a sole copy of the film and packaged it for public release. The film is about a young boy and girl that enter a forest and dig a hole to hell. As one programmer observed of Antrum, "You don't watch the film, the film watches you. " Rating: NR Genre: Horror Directed By: On Disc/Streaming: Nov 12, 2019 Runtime: 95 minutes Cast News & Interviews for Antrum: The Deadliest Film Ever Made Critic Reviews for Antrum: The Deadliest Film Ever Made Audience Reviews for Antrum: The Deadliest Film Ever Made Antrum: The Deadliest Film Ever Made Quotes Movie & TV guides.

 

Watch Antrum Movie Full BDRip is not transcode and can move down for encryption, but BRRip can only go down to SD resolution because they are transcribed. If a house or some kind of ancient relic can be haunted and capable of causing madness and/or death, why not a movie? The Ring films are a good example of how such a concept can inspire fear in even the most resilient of individuals. Even so, that’s just fantasy for viewers, who aren’t actually being handed a VHS tape that will kill them in seven days. They’re “safe” in that regard, but not for long, because one film is looking to cut the ropes holding up that particular safety net. Directed by David Amito and Michael Laicini, Antrum: The Deadliest Film Ever Made is purported to be a cursed cinematic project from the late 1970s that was lost for many years and capable of killing almost anyone who claps eyes on it, particularly obstinate film festival organizers. The two directors came up with the story with Amito writing the screenplay. Bookended by a collection of documentary-style testimonials about the strange events surrounding the film’s history (as well as the topic of the occult in general), the movie’s plot revolves around a brother (Rowan Smyth) and sister (Nicole Tompkins) traveling into the woods and trying to dig their way to Hell in order to save the soul of their recently-euthanized dog. Still, we may never have seen Antrum, had it not been for writer/director/producer Eric Thirteen who stumbled upon the movie at the Brooklyn Horror Film Festival last October. Raised on a healthy diet of cult classics like 1983’s Videodrome, he has a keen eye for game-changing cinema. “Here I was at the fest where this movie’s playing. Normally, everyone’s hyping their projects, it’s very easy to talk to people about what’s showing - and yet, I can’t get anybody to tell me what the hell actually happened in this movie everyone’s talking about, ” he said in an exclusive interview, publicly speaking about Antrum for the first time. “That’s when I had to see it, that’s when it was like, 'Ok, this is my mission now. I have to track this movie down…which is not playing anywhere else, which has no records online, which you can’t find anything about. '” In the years during which it was supposed to be “lost, ” Antrum had strange pieces added to its narrative, be it strange symbols or ghostly glimpses of unspeakable things that would make Tyler Durden or Howard Phillips Lovecraft proud. “ I think about it now almost like an old book of alchemy, or Lovecraft’s Necronomicon, ” adds the producer. “Originally, it was in Arabic and then it gets lost for years and it’s recovered, it’s got all these notes where somebody tried to translate it, but maybe it was an ill-fated attempt [because] they died in the process. There’s notes scrawled in the margins and every time the book is lost and recovered, there’s new patchwork pieces added to it. By the time you find it, it has this history. That’s really what Antrum is. ” Meeting with the directors at the aforementioned Brooklyn festival and finally getting to view the movie, Thirteen was convinced that it had to be brought to the masses. “ They almost have this reluctance to talk about the movie. I later found out that they weren’t even applying to these festivals. The festivals were reaching out to them. [Festival programmer] Matt Barone would hear about the movie somehow and want to show it, ” continues Thirteen. “There was almost this reluctance by the directors to screen it and I had convinced them to let me watch it. And later, they were talking about distribution and getting the movie out to an audience and honestly, whether or not they even wanted to do that. Which seemed pretty nuts. So we started talking at that point about how this goes out to people, how other people see it. That’s when I came onto it. ” As Thirteen sought to find a way to bring the movie to the masses, Antrum made its rounds through the entertainment industry, becoming an exclusive viewing experience for those in the “biz. ”According to the producer, Eduardo Sanchez (co-writer/director of the original Blair Witch Project) and Laurence H. Harvey (the cult actor in the Human Centipede sequels) were among those who have seen it. “I started to find out there were all these other people within the industry who were watching it, who had the same kind of obsession of the ' thing that should not be seen ', ” says Thirteen. “I sent it to David Bond [producer/co-writer of Extremity]. We’d both put out movie’s on Epic Picture’s Dread label. He became totally obsessed. Then I would hear that [ Cannibal Holocaust director] Ruggero Deodato was watching it. Or weirder [still], the band Mayhem. This was something of an industry-traded movie… It’s strange in that the only way to talk about it is to find someone who’s seen it and go talk to them. There aren’t a lot of things like that that exist anymore. ” So, can Antrum really kill you? Well, it tries very hard to convince you that it can, going so far as to preface the full film with a legal disclaimer. “Even at the heart of the movie’s narrative is this notion of storytelling. How people become immersed in fiction. The directors think about the film as a haunted house, as something that an audience grants permission to scare them. People know a haunted house isn’t haunted, it’s not about that. We know Bloody Mary won’t appear, but we get more of a chill each time we say the name. Horror is the audience’s very willing ability to forfeit rationality, ” adds Thirteen. As for the film itself, it looks, sounds, and feels exactly like a European arthouse film from the 1970s, so much so, that you may begin to believe that it really was made during that era. It’s pretty beautiful and you’ll want to soak in the grind house vibe, but all the while, you’re wondering in the back of your mind if you’re sealing your own fate as the story progresses. That tug and pull, almost cognitive dissonant frame of mind, is what Thirteen is chasing, saying: “It’s a movie that sort of demands counter takes on counter takes. There’s a certain level that says, ‘Ok, a haunted movie. Oh no, will I get cursed? ’ And then there’s another level that says, ‘Of course you won’t be cursed by a movie, don’t be ridiculous. ’ And then there is yet another level, where you’re still thinking about the film days afterwards. You want to show it to your friend, and when you show it to your friend, do you tell them it’s a cursed movie? Do you sort make a cheeky joke about it? It’s in your life now, you’re talking about it, you're making decisions about it. The way the movie follows you in the real world, that’s the real curse. I want to see how that plays out, because part of the obsession of the movie is just wanting to know… what do other people think about this? How does it infect their brains? ” Thirteen recently struck a distribution deal with Uncork'd Entertainment and brought David Bond on as executive producer to bring the film to market. After exclusively circulating the entertainment industry, Antrum will screen at the Brussels International Film Festival this month before finally becoming available to the public at the end of the year on a number of different platforms in the U. S., and throughout the world in 2020. It’s a rollout Thirteen believes recaptures the magic and mystique of the pre-Internet era. “The biggest thing for me is that this was a movie that … because you couldn’t find the information about it and you couldn’t track it in the way that you could other movies, it was begging for discovery. I wanted everyone to be able to be part of that secretive tape-swap, mysterious VHS-find feeling, ” he says. "You don’t want audiences to be spoiled. We’re simultaneously the creatures that love to immediately see the new Jordan Peele trailer and we can’t stop ourselves, and then we also complain we know too much going into a movie. I know that feeling, because that’s me. ”.

Posted on Thursday, October 24th, 2019 by A cursed film that can kill those who see it isn’t really something new. If you’ve seen The Ring, or John Carpenter’s Cigarette Burns, this will look familiar. But Antrum: The Deadliest Film Ever Made wears its heart (and pentagram) on its sleeve and delivers a fun and sometimes emotional film that feels like a throwback to the films of William Castle and his clever gimmicks. Antrum opens with an ominous warning that “ Antrum isn’t safe. ” Said by an expert during the movie’s opening documentary segment, complete with talking heads which discuss the film you’re about to see. Indeed, you get not one, but two films for the price of one when you see Antrum. At first glance, this is a mockumentary about an infamously cursed film that literally kills those who watch it. As we learn, the film, which is thought to be the work of an Eastern European filmmaker form the ‘70s, only screened theatrically twice, prior to which it had already garnered a reputation for making the festival programmers who saw it drop dead. Then a screening in a film festival in Belgium resulted in the movie theater burning down, and another one resulted in an audience riot and the trampling of several would-be audience members. It’s a clever throwback to the William Castle era of cinema, as the talking head interviews prepare you for the worst once the filmmakers say they’ve unearthed the original 35mm print of the film, and several warnings flash on screen telling of how the film may trigger extreme anxiety, seizures, panic attacks, and death. Co-directors Michael Laicini and David Amito play the mockumentary completely straight, perfectly replicating the look of a BBC documentary despite hyping up a film that – so far – doesn’t do anything. Once the film’s second layer begins, which takes up the majority of the running time, we get to see the cursed Antrum. In the film, two siblings have run away from home. Their beloved puppy, Maxine, has passed away and the brother wants nothing more than to make sure that their dog is going to the good place. His sister then decides to take him to the fabled spot where Lucifer himself fell to Earth, all so they can open a portal to Hell, recite some incantations, and save their deal dog’s soul. Along the way, the siblings see and hear things that disturb both them and the audience. Are they really on their way to hell, or is it just a forest? What are those two men camping in the woods with what looks like a Brazen Bull (good luck sleeping after googling what it is)? Are they demons or just weird? Antrum fully commits to the bit, with time-appropriate clothing and a credits sequence that looks to be Russian, and a film grain that makes it look like a ‘70s European arthouse film – even if at times it becomes obvious that the film was actually shot in 2019 and not in the ‘70s. The movie takes some time to find its footing, especially when it comes to the audience caring about the young brother and sister. But as the film goes along, the superimposed demonic sigils appear in random frames (170 of them! According to the documentary), and images of demons staring at the audience start appearing, we’re off to a delicious life with some truly creepy imagery. This all culminates with a horrific sequence and one of the most emotional bits in a horror movie since A Quiet Place did that to John Krasinski. Those who say that The Blair Witch Project could never be replicated in 2019 better take a look at this film. Antrum: The Deadliest Film Ever Made may not convince viewers that the film is cursed and they’re going to die after watching it (I haven’t… yet) but its commitment to the gimmick, its ethereal score, and its eerie imagery make for a creepy and effective throwback horror film. /Film Rating: 7. 5 out of 10 Cool Posts From Around the Web:.

The quality is quite good because it is not re-encoded. With the use of H.264, bit rate savings of 50% or more compared to MPEG-2 Part 2 are reported.

 

( 288) 4. 7 1h 34min 2019 X-Ray 13+ Rumored to have been lost, Antrum appears as a cursed film from the 1970s. Viewers are warned to proceed with caution. It's said to be a story about a young boy and girl who enter the forest to save the soul of their recently deceased pet. They journey to The Antrum, the very spot the devil landed after being cast out of heaven. There, the children begin to dig a hole to hell. Rentals include 30 days to start watching this video and 48 hours to finish once started. Watch for $0. 00 with Prime By ordering or viewing, you agree to our Terms. Sold by Amazon Digital Services LLC.

 

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