2.5/5
Stars
A young girl gets possessed by an evil
spirit which trapped in a mysterious box.
Although there is nothing in the film that
will scare the living daylights out of you, the makers have done well to not
try too hard either.
The film starts with an old woman trying to
open a mysterious box. However, before she tries to destroy the box, she is
thrown violently around the room by an unseen force. Cut to a
recently-separated couple Clyde (Jeffrey Dean Morgan) and Stephanie Brenek
(Kyra Sedgwick) who are trying to make their kids, Emily (Natasha Calis) and
Hannah (Madison Davenport), feel that everything is normal. Clyde takes his
daughters along for the weekend to his new house. At a yard sale, Emily chances
upon the same mysterious box which killed the old woman. She is enchanted by
the box and cajoles her father to buy it off. The box, of course, is a dybbuk
box that dates back to the 1920s. It contained a broken spirit of a Jewish
demon. We find this out much later. What happens in the interim is a lot of
'terrifying' stuff! Emily gets possessed and does a lot of evil things in the
house. Grunting horrifyingly, assaulting people around her, being extremely
abrasive and a lot more. Moths fly out of her mouth. Hands jut out of her
jawline! She also kills her mother's boyfriend.
All this goes on until the father
approaches a Jew to free his daughter off the spirit. Is the ending happy or
sad? Go figure!
The story is quite predictable. There's
nothing novel about the concept. However, the presentation wasn't that bad.
Luckily, the makers do not vie for something ambitious. There's no 3-D for
starters, no over-the-top visual effects and no shenanigans! The execution was
simple. Although the scenes are not overtly terrifying, you might be left
shaken a bit after watching the proceedings. Director Ole Bornedal does a
decent job of the film, however, leaves the ending a bit too predictable. The cast does a
fine job. Natasha Calis, who plays the possessed girl, is absolutely terrific and
at some places, terrifying.
'The Possession' is a decent film. If you
really 'dig' horror films, you may be a bit disappointed.
Shivom
Oza
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