Cronos

összes plakát
Előzetes

Tartalmak(1)

A strange object, the "Cronos device," has been found inside the statue of an angel in an antique store. While the dealer, Jesus Gris, is holding the device, it springs open and its metallic legs pierces his flesh. Once "bitten," he develops a craving for human blood, and his body grows more and more youthful with each drink. As the addiction spreads through his body, he realizes he desires the blood of his innocent granddaughter. In horror, he sacrifices himself, and destroys the Cronos, for love. (forgalmazó hivatalos szövege)

(több)

Videók (1)

Előzetes

Recenziók (3)

POMO 

az összes felhasználói recenzió

magyar Intelligens és lebilincselő pszichológiai horror egy kis ősi vérszívó gépezetről és áldozatáról, egy idős emberről, aki fokozatosan enged a gépezet hívogató pusztításának. Guillermo del Toro már karrierje kezdetén is ügyes volt. ()

DaViD´82 

az összes felhasználói recenzió

angol Del Toro’s feature length debut can have as many positive aspects as it likes (and there definitely has a few). It could be the most interesting (which it is), original (in places we could claim that), well acted and full of movie buff enthusiasm (the Blade Runner bit is excellent). But in my eyes, this still doesn’t make it a good movie and never will. Due to the pace. Chronos works as a sure-fire sleep potion that not even the nighttime streaming from the house of representatives or counting any number of sheep can counter. P.S.: The bonuses on the special edition are more entertaining than the movie itself. ()

Hirdetés

Othello 

az összes felhasználói recenzió

angol Del Toro's Spanish-language films have a lot in common – the child at the center of the action who knows more and is generally wiser than the surrounding adult characters, an insect in center frame, or the absence of authorities/environmentalists who have the ability to resolve the situation from an outside pragmatic perspective. Cronos is something of a family horror film (despite a decent bloodiness) with very sensitive cinematography and surprisingly intricate camerawork for a debut. As with all of del Toro's horror films, it's not particularly about fear, but about the interplay between man and the supernatural, with both having something in store for the other. ()

Galéria (10)