Rainy summer evening... Young people are arriving at the new trendy club named Phobos which is still under construction. Or re-construction - since it's a former bomb shelter which is ...... (Full plot summary below)
Rainy summer evening... Young people are arriving at the new trendy club named Phobos which is still under construction. Or re-construction - since it's a former bomb shelter which is ...
Leave your thoughts about Phobos. Fear Kills.
Philadelphia InquirerSteven ReaFear(s) of the Dark, a French production, interweaves the shorts, linking the segments together thematically, and narratively. |
Chicago ReaderJ.R. JonesSinister and beautiful, this mostly black-and-white animation from France culls the talents of six artists and designers. |
Boston GlobeTy BurrIt makes a nicely grim little Halloween appetizer, although you may want to go home and hide under the bed afterward. |
Seattle Post-IntelligencerBill WhiteDespite the cultural and artistic differences among the contributors, the overall production design maintains a unified tone, helped in part by Laurent Perez's eerie soundtrack. |
Chicago TribuneChristopher BorrelliWorks best when it works primal--which is not the same thing as working dumb. |
The A.V. ClubTasha RobinsonThese stories are frightening, but they contain few shocks or flinches; they're deeper and more psychological, more about adult anxiety than pure terror. |
The New York TimesJeannette CatsoulisShot in luminous whites, pulsing blacks and gorgeous grays, the stories explore sexual insecurity, rural superstition and sociopolitical anxieties with an inventiveness that's seldom scary but never less than mesmerizing. |
Los Angeles TimesMark OlsenNone of the segments are really interested in jump/scare/slasher horror, but rather the slow, creeping terror of feeling something is wrong and something worse is coming, making the film a most frightful Halloween aperitif. |
Film ThreatJeremy MathewsA visually exhilarating trip through the darker regions of the subconscious. |
The Hollywood ReporterStephen FarberHalf a dozen directors from America and Europe contribute stories to this tasty potpourri. |