The Clique (2006) Poster

(2006)

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4/10
It Scared Me!!! No, Not Even Close...
nammage30 January 2017
Warning: Spoilers
My title's unfair. Not one single horror film I've ever seen has ever scared me. I guess I keep watching them hoping one day one will but I doubt it. I do like the cliché aspect and sometimes mysteries presented in horror films. Most of them are paint-by-numbers and therefore extremely easy to figure out the mystery aspect of who the bad person or persons are. There have been a few, a literal handful, that stumped me but most are the same and this film is no different.

Usually when a group of teenagers go to a house in the middle of nowhere it's a cabin, a run down house, or a mansion of some kind. This house is residential. One story house that you'd find anywhere. The grandmother of one of the characters died, I believe, and the parents were packing up but couldn't finish...there is nothing in this house that seems as if anyone packed anything up.

I loved how it's a group of friends, two of which get brutally slashed yet no one ever wonders where they are. Also, the two went out to the car in the garage, I believe, to have sex. Um...why couldn't they go to a bedroom? Not like there's any adults around.

The acting was bad but I've actually seen much worse. The lighting was poor, mainly in the outside night scenes. The video quality was mildly okay but not the worst quality I've seen. I felt it was more the anticipation of horror throughout the film than any actual horror. Yes, the beginning had a slasher scene that didn't actually show anything, and then the couple in the car which did, and basically you get some at the end to wrap it up.

The music was good, both composition and song choice. Usually with low budget films I tend to only care for one or the other. Didn't care too much for most of the flashbacks, especially the ones you couldn't hear them talking yet they stay fixed on those flashbacks.

Overall I would say it's worth watching once or twice but no more.
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6/10
Passable slasher
Woodyanders3 June 2022
Warning: Spoilers
A group of high school students decide to spend a weekend at an empty house in the woods. Goth outcast Bobby Nichols (nicely played with brooding intensity by Ryan Carty) crashes said party and pretty soon the body count starts to mount.

While director David Basulto delivers a satisfying smattering of bloody violence and generates a fair amount of tension, he alas lets the familiar, but still enjoyable story unfold at a rather plodding pace. Moreover, the mostly annoying and unlikeable bickering characters are impossible to care about and hence basically get just what they deserve. Fortunately, the decent no-name cast do acceptable work and the killer's true identity proves to be a genuine surprise. An okay slice'n'dice outing.
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9/10
Surprised me...which is a good thing!
FrightMeter23 July 2006
I didn't expect much from this film at all. In fact, I debated in my local Blockbuster for several minutes whether to even rent it or not. Being a huge slasher flick fan, in the end I felt that it was my duty to check it out (hehe). I am very glad I did. By no means does this flick offer anything new to the genre at all, and I expect that most mainstream horror fans will trash it, but I enjoyed it. The plot of this flick is pretty cliché, and again, doesn't offer anything new. A group of high school friends decide to spend the weekend at one of their grandmother's house. Grandma recently passed away, so they have the place to themselves and they are ready for a fun filled weekend! However, 6 months earlier the resident weird kid was put into a juvenile detention center for butchering his entire family. On the way to the secluded house, one of our teens casually mentions that he was released the day before. Needless to say, the group begins to get picked off one by one during an evening of Truth and Dare, which reveals that many of the friends were closer to the weird kid than any of them knew.

First the BAD: This is a pretty low budget film. IMDb says it's budget was only $100,000 and it shows. The film has a grainy feel to it (which actually works in its favor in some parts) and the lighting is horrendous. It's dark when it's supposed to be light and light when it's supposed to be dark in many parts of the film. The dialog is mediocre and at some points just ridiculous and amateurish, particularly in the opening scenes when we are introduced to our group of friends. This is problematic because I fear that many viewers will see the low film quality at the start of the film and then hear the dialog and be turned off right away, without giving the film a chance. Believe me, it gets better. Also, the pacing of the film could have been better. Their are good attempts to establish our characters with long conversations, but this slows the film down, particularly when there isn't that high of a body count to begin with. Also, you won't find a lot of gore or blood here. The characters who die pretty much do so in the same way-a hunting knife. More creative deaths could have helped. Lastly, though the identity the killer is a pleasant surprise, the showdown between killer and hero/heroine is pretty damned rushed and the lighting is pretty bad, so it makes it hard to see what exactly is happening.

The GOOD: Since I ended up liking this film, and fear I will probably be in the minority once more reviews start pouring in on here, I will really focus on WHY Iliked this flick. First, the acting is actually pretty decent for one of these films. These are REAL teenagers here..not 30 year olds trying to act like teenagers, which we often see in these things. Almost all the cast holds their own and you can really buy into them being friends. Also, beside the typical slut and jock, there aren't really any clichéd characters here. The script spends a great deal of time building up these characters and their relationships. Sure, you get the typical cheesy sex scenes thrown in, but for the most part, these are characters that we can care about. The setting of the film is also pretty atmospheric and this is wear the graininess and cheap look of the film actually works in it's favor, particularly during the outdoor scenes. The film really tries to be something more than a brainless slasher flick-characters don't do the typical stupid "let me go check that noise outside by myself" that we often witness in these. Most importantly, for a film that has such a clichéd plot and a handful of characters, I managed to be surprised and the identity of the killer. I assure you that it isn't as obvious as you may think it is, and while twist surprise killer endings have become a cliché of the modern slasher flick, this one pulls it off quite well without leaving the viewer feeling duped.

OVERALL: I liked this film. I was very curious to see how others on IMDb felt about it, but mine is the first review. I think I will probably be in the minority, but I would recommend this. Maybe I was just in a good mood when I watched it, but it really had a certain charm and feel to it that I haven't seen with a direct to video teen slasher in quite some time. Also, definite bonus points for the killer's identity, which is sure to be a surprise (anyone who says they guessed from the beginning is simply lying!!) If you are a horror/slasher fan, give this film a fair chance. You can certainly do a lot worse! For a DTV slasher 9 out of 10.
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Dying in the dark
lspeth5 March 2007
A teen slasher movie, one of those where a mostly pre-bonded group goes to a remote location (driving along the much-filmed Angeles Crest), where phones and power can be conveniently disrupted, for sex and taunting and the de rigeur Truth-or-Dare game. Actually pretty well acted but flawed -- fatally for me -- by two elements. One is the idea that a girl who could alibi a murder suspect would not only keep from doing so rather than admit the relationship to her friends but couldn't have done so to the police on a confidential basis (didn't the suspect name her?). Second, the endless blackness on the screen in which major characters are offed and the story reaches its climax. Come on, folks, there are techniques for conveying that the action is happening in the dark and still letting us see. Won't be watching this again (or listening to the gasps and crashes while staring endlessly at a dead black screen).
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