The legend of “The Weeping Woman” deals with a young woman named Maria (Marisol Ramirez) whose jealousy and rage over her philandering husband caused her to drown her two sons and then commit suicide, two rather unforgivable sins, and ever since her ghost wanders the land looking for children to take as her own. One has to admit that is a pretty good legend to base your ghost story on, such a good story that this phantom has appeared in several movies and television shows to date, but director Michael Chaves and producer James Wan don’t actually care much for the legend itself – only referenced in the film’s cold open – as this film is all about creepy shots of the veiled ghost lurking in the background before it eventually screams and lunges at the camera.
Saturday, August 3, 2019
The Curse of La Llorona (2019) – Review
With The Curse of La Llorona we get the eighth installment in The Conjuring Universe franchise – that’s eight films in just six years – and with that James Wan has almost created a horror subgenre all his own. Like many of the films in this series the supernatural events are loosely, and I mean very loosely, based on supposed true stories, but even if you believe in possessed dolls and haunted houses even the most forgiving bullshit detector would wear out its batteries viewing these films. Case in point The Curse of La Llorona a movie that takes the Latin American folktale of "The Weeping Woman" and uses it for this particular ghost and then proceeds to make a vapid movie that is simply a collection of jump scares and moronic characters.
The legend of “The Weeping Woman” deals with a young woman named Maria (Marisol Ramirez) whose jealousy and rage over her philandering husband caused her to drown her two sons and then commit suicide, two rather unforgivable sins, and ever since her ghost wanders the land looking for children to take as her own. One has to admit that is a pretty good legend to base your ghost story on, such a good story that this phantom has appeared in several movies and television shows to date, but director Michael Chaves and producer James Wan don’t actually care much for the legend itself – only referenced in the film’s cold open – as this film is all about creepy shots of the veiled ghost lurking in the background before it eventually screams and lunges at the camera.
The legend of “The Weeping Woman” deals with a young woman named Maria (Marisol Ramirez) whose jealousy and rage over her philandering husband caused her to drown her two sons and then commit suicide, two rather unforgivable sins, and ever since her ghost wanders the land looking for children to take as her own. One has to admit that is a pretty good legend to base your ghost story on, such a good story that this phantom has appeared in several movies and television shows to date, but director Michael Chaves and producer James Wan don’t actually care much for the legend itself – only referenced in the film’s cold open – as this film is all about creepy shots of the veiled ghost lurking in the background before it eventually screams and lunges at the camera.
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