Product Details
Wes Craven Presents They

Wes Craven Presents They
Directed by Robert Harmon

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Product Description

Scream king Wes Craven presents this terrifying suspense thriller where the most frightening childhood fears become real when they return to stake their claim! A psychology student (Laura Regan -- UNBREAKABLE) who experienced "night terrors" as a child must face the chilling realization that her nightmares were not all in her head! And when she finds others who shared similar experiences, together they discover the most frightening truth of all: the monsters in their closets marked them as children and are now returning to collect them! Also starring Marc Blucas (WE WERE SOLDIERS), Ethan Embry (SWEET HOME ALABAMA), and Jon Abrahams (SCARY MOVIE) in a hip young cast ... you don't want to miss a minute of this terror-filled thriller!


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #56633 in DVD
  • Brand: Disney
  • Released on: 2003-06-10
  • Rating: PG-13 (Parental Guidance Suggested)
  • Aspect ratio: 2.35:1
  • Formats: Closed-captioned, Color, Dolby, DVD, Widescreen, NTSC
  • Original language: English
  • Number of discs: 1
  • Running time: 89 minutes

Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com
They're coming to get you, but who--or what--are They? By refusing to offer specifics, this chilling mood-piece rises above its familiar premise and achieves its desired effect of percolating dread. It's a Wes Craven presentation, sponsored by the horror-meister but directed by Robert Harmon, whose 1986 thriller The Hitcher has a modest legion of fans. They deserves a similar following after its brief theatrical release; Harmon values suggestion over explicit frights (i.e., don't expect a full-throttle shocker), and he effectively exploits our collective fear of things that go bump in the night. Petite newcomer Laura Regan is well-cast as Julia, a psychology grad student who, like a close friend who just committed suicide, has suffered "night terrors" since childhood… and her gravest fears have now returned. Is it all in her head, along with that mysterious implant in her skull? Do They really exist, in this movie's gloomy nooks and crannies? If you prefer subtlety, They is creepily engrossing, and better than its box-office failure would suggest. --Jeff Shannon


Customer Reviews

Were You Scared of the Dark?4
How well do you remember your night fears, your fears of what went bump in the night, or what you imagined went bump in the night, from when you were a child? The closer you are to those fears, the better this movie will be for you. If you were one of those unimaginitive children who were not frightened of the dark, or if you have forgotten those fears, you will hate this movie--it won't scare you and you will think it is bad.

The acting is pretty much stock-in-trade for a horror film, meaning that it has the usual share of ups and downs.

The story gives no concrete details of what "they" are. This is one of the key points in "how well do you remember your night fears?" If you remember (if you were imaginitive enough), part of what made the dark so scary is that the fears were amorphous--all you "knew" as a kid was that there were things in the dark that were out to get you. You could imagine so many possible forms they could take, so many possible details about them, none of which were certain. Therefore, you did not know what they were, why they were after you, or how they would get you, and you had only the vaguest idea of what they looked like. You knew they kept to the shadows so that they could not be seen clearly, and you knew that when lights were shined at them, they simply were no longer there, only to reappear in another shadow or when the light was moved away.

This movie plays on those exact fears, and actually gives more details than you had as a child, details which make the creatures all the more strange and frightening. If lights make them go away, as imagined in childhood, what happens if they can make the lights go out?

I say again, if you are close to your night fears from childhood, if you remember them well and if they were highly imaginitive, this movie is for you. If not, avoid it like the plague, because you will hate it.

Not a 1 Star Movie4
A lot of people don't like this film because it doesn't answer every question. It never answers why some people were chosen, and it never gives an answer how they can truly beat the creatures from the night. This is a dark movie in atmosphere and overall story. It is about not being able to beat your demons real or otherwise. Sometimes there isn't an easy answer to beat the monster(s) like in Jason or Freddy films. I would say to give it a chance.

Are "They" Real And Are "They" Coming?4
So much better than its reputation that it's scary, "They" is a cryptic, cerebral horror movie that's like the Rorscach Test of film: what one person sees in it may be vastly different than the way another views it, and that could be the main reason behind the wildly mixed reaction it's received.

The nameless, shapeless things that scare you in your room during childhood, glimpsed in shadow or heard in silence, or suddenly perceived while half-asleep, are real. Or are they? At least one young man thinks they are, thinks they're still watching, and thinks he's discovered ways to track their patterns. After getting in contact with childhood friend (and "They"'s main protagonist) Julia Lund, Julia finds herself drawn into the 'delusions' of her friend, who shows all the signs of deep mental illness and severe paranoia. But could he still be right? A number of others experiencing the same apparant phenomenon enter the picture, and it becomes uncomfortably clear to Julia that "They" may be more than paranoid imaginations.

With great performances all around, including Laura Regan (Julia), Jon Abrahams, and perhaps most of all Dagmara Dominczyk, and alternately gloomy/eerie and gorgeous/eerie cinematography (see the nighttime road scene shrouded in fog and surrounded by dense trees) this is a seriously underrated horror movie. Some have said its weakness is it only seems to be showing the tip of the iceberg of what its capable of. I disagree with the 'weakness' part, I agree that for the vast majority of the movie it's only showing the tip of the iceberg. There's something big under the surface here, something on par, perhaps, with the likes of what H.P. Lovecraft would imagine. I'm not saying I would expect Chthulu or Yog-Sottoth to show up in a potential sequel, but that something on a really mysterious and grand scale Similar to what Lovecraft would write is (or could be) at play here. The ending is shocking. (And a hundred times preferable to the Alternate Ending, which not coincidentally was the last Alternate Ending on a movie I really loved that I ever watched. I'm kind of thinking now, 'if it's great the first time around I might be better off skipping the alternate, lest it dilute the movie in my mind'. This alternate ending kind of weakened "They" in my mind but only for a few weeks, after which it returned to its lofty status in my heart. Some people apparantly liked the alternate ending Better though, so you'll have to make up your own mind on whether you personally want to check it out) The ending also leaves room for a sequel, but they would probably need to go Really big budget if they want to really explore the entirety of that iceberg. Maybe a novelized sequel by a skilled author instead if they can't afford to do the follow-up right? Sequel or none, this movie is a great one, a good 8.5 or 9 out of ten. Also recommended (in more or less the same vein): "In The Mouth Of Madness", "Boogeyman" (2005; haven't yet seen the unrelated 80s movie of the same name), this year's stunning "Dark Water" remake (haven't seen the original yet), the "Ring" series (originals and remakes), "The Shining" (I prefer the '97 version, others prefer the '80 version), "The Sixth Sense" and science fiction's "The Arrival".