AniInterview
Sorry, this movie sucks
Salubfoto
It's an amazing and heartbreaking story.
Sarita Rafferty
There are moments that feel comical, some horrific, and some downright inspiring but the tonal shifts hardly matter as the end results come to a film that's perfect for this time.
Geraldine
The story, direction, characters, and writing/dialogue is akin to taking a tranquilizer shot to the neck, but everything else was so well done.
teunpel
When I first heard the Netherlands was going to make a scary movie I got really exited. It took a while before the website was launched and the trailer was released. The trailer looked really professional so I was really looking forward to it. The film poster did not look cheap like those of most Dutch movies but looked like it could have been from the States. With a low budget the filmmakers managed to make a scary movie which is no worse than its American or Asian equivalent.The quality of the movie is good enough to be released in the rest of Europe. Though there is room for improvement, the special make-up, visual effects, sets, music and sound effects are really great and demonstrates the talent and capability of people to create a good movie. The tone of the music and storyline resembles the Asian style. Dark atmosphere and colors and an evil cursed house with a dark history. The image quality etc. looks like the American style horror movie with one main difference. In the typical American scary movie the black people and blond girls die first. We also know from minute one who is gonna live. This movie completely breaks away from it (the blond girl and black guy are the last remaining. The movie is shot with HD camera's and special effects such as green screen are used effectively.Unlike the Asian horror style it does not have a huge plot twist at the end or many disturbing things in it. There are multiple threats and the seven friends must uncover the dark history of the house before it kills them all. The background story is not very simple and maybe to hard to understand. Even though the story is not most original (a cursed and haunted house, good friends on holiday, etc), and it closely resembles the American and Asian style, it's still good. I don't understand why people don't like it just because it looks like the conventional American and Asian thing, that's a good thing, right? This means it is of the same quality as two great movie industries and is appealing to a large public.Another discussion is the title. All Dutch people seem to have the preconceived idea that a scary movie can only have a good title if the title is English. I do not agree. Scream, Halloween Resurrection, Final Destination, The Ring etc. Dutch people think they sound scary but it's not like the title has the same impact on native speakers. Does De Laatste Bestemming or De Kring sound scary to you? Of course not! A horror title does not have to make you pee your pants from fear it just has to sound dark.The movie starts of with a blast. A women in despair in a burning house screaming for her baby and burning to death. We meet the main characters in very short amount of time. It would be better if we would have got to know them a bit better so we would have more sympathy for them. Maybe it was a budgetary problem. It does not really become clear the friends want to go climbing in the Scottish mountains either because we don't hear them talking about it or preparing for it. The old friends sit around a fire and are attacked by dogs. They try to drive away from them but hit a tree. The car chase was a good thing but it went to fast and the camera movements were to wild. The first half hour is scary but the sense of the intensity of the situation does not come through. Only when the first person dies and people are burned by an evil burning panic starts to spread.A great job done by the actors who are truly shocked by the situation and cry, tremble, scream etc. Every actor does a great job although not all of them have any depth. My compliments to Anniek, Victoria, Mads and Everon for their great acting. They convincingly portrayed the people and the fear and shock of it all. The cursed and haunted house is truly scary and the music carriers the movie. There are several really scary moments such as the encounters with Mary McBane, the closet, the visions and other moments. Vulgus, the demon child was really creepy and he moved in an odd way. I feel the movie would have been way more uncomfortable if we would have seen more of him. The dialogs are not fantastic but this does not disturb the movie.The house is really old and creepy and contains jars with fetuses, old paintings, a laundry room etc. As the movie gets along the dark history is uncovered and more people die. The movie builds up to a nice climax with great music, visual effects, acting and a great shock. The movie truly is a scary movie with shocking moments, scary settings, music and contains gross and heavy moments. The only thing I wonder about is why the story was set in Scotland and not in The Netherlands. We have had witch trials too.It is unfair people refuse to see this movie just because it is Dutch. The Dutch are so accustomed to be negative about their own product and so positive about anything that is not Dutch. It is just weird. We should be a little more positive and proud of the movies and artists who are good and at least give them a shot. I really advice everyone to at least watch it once and judge for yourself. I hope the Netherlands will start making more genre movies not just comedies and book adaptations. Maybe a good action thriller? If only more money could be spend on making movies, the quality would improve greatly because there is plenty of talent.
Coventry
If there's one thing "Dood Eind" can teach us, it is that even the Dutch know about all the dreadful clichés of the horror genre and that it took until now, late 2006, before they processed them all into one lame movie. I'm pretty sure that, if this movie was made in any other country, it never would have seen the light of day, but since it's the Netherlands and since this nation is desperately craving its very own horror tradition, "Dood Eind" got exaggeratedly promoted in the specialized press and on websites. The story revolves on themes that you've seen a thousand times before already and largely blends the plots of the overrated films "Blair Witch Project" and "Ju-On: The Grudge". The writers, however, claim that their main inspiration was Sam Raimi's "The Evil Dead", but I spotted very few similarities between that classic and this pretentious piece of junk, apart from the ominous woods and the book of the dead. Seven friends that haven't seen each other since their childhood (and actually can't stand each other anymore...) come together for a reunion trip in the Scottish countryside. On the first night around the campfire, the group is attacked by ravenous dogs and they're forced to take refugee in an abandoned house. Minor mistake, as it soon turns out that the house is haunted by the restless spirit of a woman whose baby got killed over a hundred years ago on suspicion of witchery. A haunted house? Dwelling ghosts?? Really? That's so original... NOT! Naturally it doesn't take long before all the clichés start following each other at fast pace. Spontaneously slamming doors, eerie noises coming from the attic and the occasional sudden appearance of a pale-faced ghost lady, they're all there. Stereotypes are well-presented as well, as the clique of seven contains a coward, a bitch, a macho, etc.. Strange fiery mucus that grows on the walls kills most of the Dutch trespassers, and the remaining survivors have to try and understand the house's history if they ever want to get out alive. Technically speaking, the film is okay. The budget was extremely low, but it was nevertheless enough to come up with a handful of decent visual effects and adequate filming locations. Even the acting performances are acceptable, although some of the players are difficult to understand even if you speak the same language. Nope, the problem with "Dood Eind" is purely the substance. There's never any tension since you can feel the 'twists' and 'shocks' coming well in advance and especially the climax is really pathetic. There's still hope for the Dutch horror film (check out "Sl8N8"), but "Dood Eind" is a production better left ignored.
Calexica
Although there were some nice shock-effects and the special effects were great this was a very boring movie! the characters had no depth at all and the actors weren't that great (there have to be more talented actors in The Netherlands). The plot is explained at the end but in the mean while you have to sit for more than an hour wondering what the hell it is all about. It was a complete rip off from other successful horror films. It was a nice attempt to try and compete with Sl8n8cht but they failed big time! Critics claim that there is a revival of the so called Nederhorror but now I know what they mean. "Neder" stands for low and this movie is at a very low level.
Terence
I saw this film on the first day it was released. I was glad it finally came, it would have been earlier. I had bad expectations, but as a Dutch horror fan and maker, I hoped it wouldn't be that bad.But no matter how low my expectations were, the film was worse. It starts with the screenplay. Barely a story (the first half hour is mainly slowly walking through hallways with flashlights), uninteresting characters (you don't care if they live or die), and awful dialog. For no reason this story takes place in Scotland. Which leads to a Dutch actress talking half Englisch/ half what's-supposed-to-be Scottisch. Very funny, not intended to be.Every horror scene is just one familiar from other American/Japanese films, badly imitated. The only things that are okay for Dutch standards are the score and the visual effects (not all of them). But this does not a good movie make!I find it common sense that the makers had to search far and wide for investors, since this is obviously a piece of crap. And then comes the news that Tarantino's company is interested in making a remake. I'm sorry, but we can do much much better than this, when it comes to Dutch horror. Do NOT let this be the representative film for Dutch horror in the new millennium.