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Horror anthologies might be everywhere these days, but the Korean entry Horror Stories raises the bar with four terrifying stories (and a nail-biting wraparound tale), each one chilling enough to be it's own feature. If you thought this was going to be a tame collection of teen-friendly "ghost girl" stories think again. Horror Stories goes right for the jugular with non-stop splatter, intense shocks and riveting suspense. A high school girl is abducted and forced by a psycho to tell him the scariest tales she knows. Don't Answer the Door finds a little brother and sister home alone at night and under siege. Endless Flight has a serial killer escaping police custody in the middle of an otherwise empty flight. Secret Recipe serves up a wildly macabre fairy tale about two jealous stepsisters who take plastic surgery to nightmarish extremes. Ambulance on the Death Zone is a claustrophobic zombie shocker with a paramedic and a mother at a standoff over her possibly infected young daughter.
P**K
Korean Horror Within Horror!
Horror Stories was a fair film for its genre, but since it was five short stories packed into one film, it leaves you wanting more from the tales that had the most promise.The movie can be compared to the way Twilight Zone the Movie was made, or even the Creepshow films. By that I mean, there is one central story occurring, while other stories are told in the background. That format usually works well, but in this case, it left me wanting more from the two stories I found the most interesting.The most intriguing one being the lead tale, which is about a Korean School girl who wakes up in a shady room where she finds herself bound and gagged. She soon notices a silent psychopath who asks her to tell him a scary story so he can sleep. That premise pulls you in right away and was the most interesting concept to me. I wish the film could've elaborated on that central theme more. But as it turns out, the rest of the movie involves her telling him four scary tales to keep him at bay. As long as she can tell him a scary story, she's safe. And the film shifts back to them as the film progresses.As for the other four stories, my favorite would have to be the first tale about two children, who are left home alone while their mother is out working one evening. The whole latchkey child premise worked well for me. It was believable in terms of the way children can be in that situation. And the horror that follows was interesting, scary and well explained by the end. It was also the least graphic of the four stories.The second tale involved a serial killer who is captured by police and is transported on a plane with a small crew and two police officers. Overall the tale was good, and the guy who plays the killer, did his part to make the story suspenseful. A crazy guy on a plane can be pretty terrifying since you have no place to go.The next tale involved two sisters and a materialistic mother who scheme to get one of the daughters married off to the "president" of somewhere. Whether it's the president of a company or if he was supposed to be the president of S. Korean, I couldn't tell. But the tale definitely adds some horror, with cannibalism of all things. It wasn't my favorite tale. I felt like it needed more time to be developed. I got the general reason for the rivalry between the sisters. But it seemed like a story that would have benefitted from a longer format. It reminded me of a twisted J-Horror story. Kind of like Tales of Terror from Tokyo.The same could be said about the last tale, which involves a virus and a very turbulent ambulance ride. I have to admit the tension that follows involves horror, but it's shoved into a box. It could have been developed a lot further also. But as it is, you get some scares while understanding the reason for the circumstances that the characters are in. Kind of reminiscent of an end of the world zombie film.The strongest gem overall though is when we come back to the school girl and her captor. That's the story where you're really waiting to see what happens next. It finally comes to a conclusion and you'll just have to watch it for yourself to see how it plays out.As for the tech aspects, the film is in Korean only with English subtitles. There are also some interesting interviews with some of the cast members, along with a few trailers of other films that didn't really peak my interest. These extras were on the DVD version. I doubt they would be accessible on the Amazon Prime version.In the end, I gave the film a four. It had some good scares in it and I thought the actors did a good job with their roles. I would have liked to have seen more with the girl and her captor in general, but that's not what the film was about. It was a Korean version of horror shorts. So you have to take it for what it is. It definitely had a different flavor to it than J-Horror films. Overall a good rental if you like K-Horror stories or Horror Anthologies in general.
L**6
Lives up to its name
If you've seen the V/H/S movies, this movie has the same set-up premise. Four horror stories are surrounded by a wrap around story that gives a reason for the four stories to exist. In this case, a teenager girl is kidnapped by a serial killer who tells her that if she tells him stories that scare him well enough, he won't kill her. So off we go with the first story of a young brother and sister home alone when an intruder breaks in. Your imagination immediately takes over and you feel as if you are one of these kids and your heart is pounding right along with the characters. It's a strong start to an accomplished series of shorts.The second short about a killer escaping on a plane is also very good, although some parts may be a bit predictable. Still, the suspense is good enough to keep you guessing and the characters play their parts well as either likable or easy to hate.The third story is so over the top you would think it would be implausible but it's not. Two sisters are fighting to win the same man and they will go to some pretty major extremes to make it happen. Although the characters are drawn from very simple good vs. bad cloth, the story will keep you guessing on how it will end and the unpredictability of it gives you a nice sense of suspense to enjoy.The fourth story has to be the best and what a way to end a movie! Zombies,a mother and an ambulance-what a great combination. I truly felt like I was there and the story line gave me goosebumps more than once as I imagined what it would feel like to be on this particular ride.The wrap around story has its own share of horror and scares and I doubt it will disappoint. I have to say this is the best horror anthology I've seen in a long time as all four stories and the wrap around are strong in scares and tension is palpable. I loved the V/H/S movies but only one or two of their stories could reach this level of fear. I can't wait to see part II.
H**N
FIVE FINE FOREIGN FRIGHTS
Different Korean directors present these five horror tales that are much more frigntening and entertaining than anything Hollywood has made in many years. These five stories include known genre types (children home alone with a killer, serial killer loose on a plane, sibling jealousy/elite cannibalism, contagious zombies) and adds something new to each making it familiar yet highly unpredictable. Horror stories successfully provides a frightfully good time, offerring something for everyone who enjoys horror. Hollywood films quit being scary years ago when it began using humor or just building suspense without anything truely scary occurring. Korean is known for excelling in psychological violent revenge tales so horror is a natural fit. Horror stories is a welcome return to the Tales From the Crypt formula, keeping the stories short, suspenseful and scary. The wrap around story is of a young girl held captive. Her kidnapper can only sleep when his blood runs cold so she has to tell him Horror Stories to stay alive. The first story "Sun and the Moon" is about two young children home alone in a scary apartment with a killer locked inside with them. The second story "Endless Flight" is about a serial killer being escorted by on a chartered flight who kills the police and is loose on the plane. Usually in these anthologies there is at least one weak story but all the Horror Stories are strong is this antholgy. This film was very well received when it was shown at the Asain Film Festival in Dallas in 2013 so this is not just my opinion, others who saw Horror Stories were impressed. Showed Horror Stories to my 21 year old daughter last night who perfers to not read subtitles but enjoyed it becasue it was so unpredictable. Highly recommended for all fans of horror or Korean films.
M**N
Good zombie segment
The zombie story is pretty good, if you were bored with zombies look to Korea for a fresh spin
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