Dark House | |
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DVD cover
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Directed by | Victor Salva |
Produced by | Charles Agron Don E. FauntLeRoy Steve Nguyen Victor Salva |
Written by | Victor Salva Charles Agron |
Based on | "Dark House" by Charles Agron |
Starring |
Tobin Bell Lesley-Anne Down Luke Kleintank Alex McKenna |
Music by | Benson Taylor |
Cinematography | Don E. FauntLeRoy |
Edited by | Ed Marx |
Production
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Charles Agron Productions
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Distributed by | Paladin |
Release date
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Running time
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103 minutes |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Dark House is a 2014 horror film directed by Victor Salva and starring Tobin Bell, Lesley-Anne Down and Luke Kleintank. The film follows a man named Nick Di Santo, who discovers that not only is his long-lost father alive, but that he may be able to explain the source of his son's telekinetic abilities.
The film tells the story of Nick Di Santo (Kleintack), who is tormented by his ability to touch someone and see exactly how they will die. On his 23rd birthday, Nick is summoned by his mother (Down) to the asylum where she has been institutionalized since his childhood. Hoping that her request to see him is a sign of improvement, Nick is stunned by her revelation that the father he thought was long dead is really alive, and that he may know the origin of Nick's terrible gift. Nick sets out to find his father with his best friend Ryan (Anthony Rey Perez) and girlfriend Eve (Alex McKenna). Every road they take on the journey leads them back to the same abandoned mansion—a house that only existed in Nick's childhood imagination, or so he thought. Finally succumbing to the will of the house, Nick becomes embroiled in a battle with a dark figure (Bell).
Critical reception for Dark House has been predominantly negative and the film holds a rating of 11% on review aggregate Rotten Tomatoes, with an average rating of 2.8/10, based on 11 reviews.The New York Times and The Hollywood Reporter both panned the film, with the latter stating that "The generic title is not even the most unimaginative element of this overstuffed, cliche-ridden horror film."Nerdist News also criticized the film, as they felt that it contained too many elements that "merely clutters up a film that might find more power in being simple."