The Real Terror Behind THE TAKING OF DEBORAH LOGAN

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 1 янв 2025

Комментарии • 1 тыс.

  • @RyanHollinger
    @RyanHollinger  3 года назад +178

    *Comment below and let me know what I should talk about next!*
    HOYEVER! If you wanna get early access to ad-free uncensored videos and join our Discord community, click here: www.patreon.com/ryanhollinger

    • @axelcordova8262
      @axelcordova8262 3 года назад +10

      Still requesting Night in the Woods and Pink Floyd's The Wall.

    • @craigpaterson953
      @craigpaterson953 3 года назад +5

      Eden Lake (2008)

    • @sethrickschottler8372
      @sethrickschottler8372 3 года назад +8

      They Look Like People is a great watch and would be a great film to cover. Super spooky.

    • @laurenblevins2596
      @laurenblevins2596 3 года назад +7

      The People Under the Stairs. That one stoked some major childhood nightmares!

    • @DDfan91
      @DDfan91 3 года назад +5

      The void, ginger snaps trilogy, repo the genetic opera, suspiria, Salem's lot, the lost boys, the love witch and over the garden wall.

  • @gatochick14
    @gatochick14 3 года назад +851

    The most haunting scene for me was the one where Deborah is found nude at her old operator's switchboard, acting like she's at work, talking to her old friends. The supernatural elements of that scene don't even matter- it's the realness of her thinking she's just working.

    • @katehucks774
      @katehucks774 3 года назад +89

      My partner’s late grandfather, who suffered from alzheimer’s as well, had an episode like this. I only got told this story since it was before I met my partner but apparently he was being given some kind of community award but when he got up on stage to receive it, he thought he was teaching again and proceeded to give an entire college-level lecture, and they just... let him. Nobody tried to correct him or stop him, they just let him give this surprisingly lucid and in-depth psychology lecture like it was exactly what they were there for, which I think was the right thing to do. But apparently it was the clearest and most cohesive he’d been for a long time, no hesitation or trailing off or confusion. He was just. Teaching. Like it was any other day, only decades earlier.

    • @Dvgteeth
      @Dvgteeth 3 года назад +21

      @@katehucks774 that is so damn sad and heartwarming at the same time. I’m way too high for this.

    • @Akeboun
      @Akeboun 3 года назад +8

      @@Dvgteeth depressingly wholesome

    • @falloutghoul1
      @falloutghoul1 3 года назад +2

      @@katehucks774
      What happened after the lecture ended?

  • @FTZPLTC
    @FTZPLTC 3 года назад +1473

    This is a strong contender for one of the saddest horror movies going. The depiction of Alzheimers is horribly real.

    • @Claymann71
      @Claymann71 3 года назад +11

      *Everywhere At the End of Time has joined the Chat
      (I realize it was about Dementia, similar feeling though. Interesting enough, both are having emerging research into treatment & management with CBD & Other similar Products. & Retrovirus Re-engineered Cone Snail Venom. Cool stuff! There's hope in the future, but time marches on for many, & far too fast for some)

    • @craigmiddlemiss6917
      @craigmiddlemiss6917 3 года назад +7

      you think this movie is sad i watched a movie called look away which really surprised me the story is about a teenage girl who swaps places with the person she sees in the mirror who is a very confident manipulate young women who is actually a demon lets just say revenge is sweet

    • @wowamber5107
      @wowamber5107 3 года назад +20

      Yes! I studied Alzheimer's and particularly how it affects the loved ones, this movie hits really hard. Alzheimer's patients often present violent behavior, which is not really talked about because of the stigma surrounding someone loosing themselves to such an aggressive disease.

    • @wowamber5107
      @wowamber5107 3 года назад +12

      @@craigmiddlemiss6917 that movie has nothing on this one, and it's really cringe

    • @chelleolsen969
      @chelleolsen969 3 года назад +9

      The actress (whose name I can’t recall) absolutely killed it as Deborah, the interview she does at the beginning talking about how there is no cure, and she can only “stave off” the disease, that didn’t feel like acting. I know it was but she knocked it out of the park with that.

  • @DogHumpsMonkey
    @DogHumpsMonkey 3 года назад +466

    As a fan of found footage, I give this movie props for doing something that rarely happens in found footage, the dude noping-out in his minivan when things start to get bonkers.

    • @jasonrhome710
      @jasonrhome710 3 года назад +29

      Same, one of the main things about this film that stays in the immediate recall tapes.

    • @rhetiq9989
      @rhetiq9989 Год назад +7

      The only other found footage movie where one of the guys nope out early that I can think of is Skinwalker Ranch. Those are the smart bunch that we rarely see in these movies

    • @lucinae8512
      @lucinae8512 Год назад +10

      He was asshole the whole time, but honestly his decision to leave is something most of us would do.

    • @Soulintent95
      @Soulintent95 Год назад +2

      This movie was so believable. Best and scariest horror movie ever made. I dont get scared of movies, but this one terrifies me.

    • @25Aadi25
      @25Aadi25 11 месяцев назад

      ​@@Soulintent95aah it was mid, I feel like Gojiam or REC2007 are still somewhat better

  • @georgespiggott5615
    @georgespiggott5615 3 года назад +508

    Something to keep in mind is that, while Alzheimers patients forget who you are, they don't forget they love you. Often they'll assume that you're a loved one they DO remember, like their spouse or sibling or even a parent.
    I can't imagine how terrifying it must be to not recognize anyone and constantly be told that you should remember more than you do. Alzheimers patients are very brave a lot of the time.

    • @fridakahlo4225
      @fridakahlo4225 3 года назад +24

      This is so true 😢 my grandmother's mother was blessed with a long life which unfortunately ended with alzeimer. In her last years, she assumed her daughter (her caretaker who happens to be my grandmother) was her mother. She knew that she was loved and taken care of.

    • @darianrose2195
      @darianrose2195 3 года назад +9

      Maybe. My uncle via marriage and his siblings dealt with the terrible ordeal of watching their mother deteriorate with the disease. Virginia led a rough life and had quite a few marriages but could be an incredibly sweet woman. I remember many times over at "grandma Tony's" while she played with us kids and made us burgers but she became such an advanced case that she eventually was admitted to at least three different nursing homes because she would become violent with staff and other residents. On top of that, at the very end she had forgotten everyone, had taken to caring for a baby doll thinking it was an actual baby, and thought my uncle, one of her children, was her boyfriend and was jealous of my aunt and would call her a slut, etc. She finally passed away and was released from that pain, but you can still see the scars left on her family. It's very sad.

    • @MrOrcshaman
      @MrOrcshaman 4 месяца назад +1

      A friend of my mothers in ireland, her husband has Alzheimers and can not even remember his wife anymore. He's in a home and she visits him but she says it gets harder on her each time, spending time with him that he can't recognise her. I can't imagine a worse fate when you love someone, and they have just disappeared from your life like this.

  • @Sp00kercy
    @Sp00kercy 3 года назад +675

    I remember being totally blown away by the acting from the woman playing Deborah. I completely got lost in the fact that she wasn't actually deteriorating and that it was only in film. She's absolutely haunting and terrifying in this film! Do agree the ending was a bit of a damp squid to what was a emotionally heavy film. Loved your views on it and keep it up!

    • @angiet7380
      @angiet7380 3 года назад +12

      The idiom is actually "damp squib"

    • @technopoptart
      @technopoptart 3 года назад +8

      @@angiet7380 i like damp sqid more

    • @Sp00kercy
      @Sp00kercy 3 года назад +12

      @@angiet7380 IT crowd reference xoxo

    • @angiet7380
      @angiet7380 3 года назад +1

      @@Sp00kercy oh, thank you. I'm sorry

    • @barry_crisp
      @barry_crisp 3 года назад

      @@Sp00kercy I love that

  • @addieholder5082
    @addieholder5082 3 года назад +913

    Alzheimers is the most painful disease to witness. “Good” days are often days where you’re loved one isn’t stuck in painful memories of their early years. This movie does an painfully amazing job at depicting the effects of Alzheimer’s on both the individual and their family.

    • @Chris-ci8vs
      @Chris-ci8vs 3 года назад +8

      Geriatric clinician here...yep, a thousand times yep.

    • @skylx0812
      @skylx0812 3 года назад +21

      I had to take guardianship over my mom after dad passed away. I signed her into care facility. My siblings decided on a DNR and mom and I had to sign it. I agonized about it days before.
      When she signed she had a moment of clarity and beamed at me. It reminded me of the look the one patient in that hospital gave the nurse in Schindler's List. The doctor and the nurse poisoned the infirmed before the soldier could arrive. There was one woman that simply beamed at the nurse in gratitude. Thats the look mom gave me.
      When I got back to their house I sat on their bed and said, well pop, you told me to use my best judgement. I hope I did the right thing and wept.
      She didn't know us in the end but she did tell a nurse, "Dad's coming to get me."

    • @Jetsetlemming
      @Jetsetlemming 3 года назад +5

      The "stuck in memories" thing is, IME, the major thing that's missing from many other portrayals of people dealing with the disease, and the most horrifying aspect of it. My grandmother'd have screaming fits where she was convinced our family were home invaders, not recognizing any of us.

    • @lizc6393
      @lizc6393 3 года назад +6

      @@skylx0812 I am sincerely sorry. I really am. I've been there, and it's my personal opinion that at her core she definitely knew who you were, she probably just wanted the pain to stop.
      You did the right thing Pumpkin.

  • @piganxiety
    @piganxiety 3 года назад +701

    My Gran had Alzheimer’s for most of my life and the upsetting scariness of Deborah really captures what i felt around her when growing up. I knew that she was ill but was too young to fully understand what was going on with her and therefore, found was scared of her and the way she acted because of her Alzheimer’s. I didn’t like being around her but also felt guilty about it because I knew that I was supposed to love and care about her and this movie does a pretty good job at showing that relationship.

    • @notyetaladie
      @notyetaladie 3 года назад +8

      I said it in another comment but I really want to get more people to watch this film.. This one was really good and is still high up there on the list of horror movies but I really loved Relic in all the ways that the taking of deborah logan disappointed. Similar themes of dealing with realities of sickness in old age. I don't want to spoil too much but it really made me want to take positive action in real life after watching.

    • @adrianatkins10
      @adrianatkins10 3 года назад +8

      That must have been a really tough experience for a child. Even grown up adults have a hard time with a loved one with Alzheimers

    • @daniozombio
      @daniozombio 3 года назад +8

      @@notyetaladie You took the words right out of my mouth. Relic is terrifying for anyone who has/had a loved one with Alzheimer's/dementia. It's also sad and heartwarming... and the ending will definitely stick with you. If you liked Deborah but wished it didn't get into weird occult snake stuff, give Relic a try!

    • @eindummkopf2970
      @eindummkopf2970 3 года назад +1

      It was the same for my grandad
      Though I never knew him before he had progressed to 3-4 word sentences so I never realy knew the man he was God rest his soul

    • @lesbwian7023
      @lesbwian7023 3 года назад +1

      My gran too (severe dementia, don't know if it was specifically alzheimer's). I knew her before it got really bad & had a really good relationship with her, but I was still a child (probably about 7 years old) when it really quickly got really bad. The last time i saw her was on a christmas eve, she thought I was her daughter (my mom) and wasn't able to clean herself properly anymore. I deeply regret it now, but I didn't see her much for the last few years of her life because I was deeply unsettled by her illness. I understood that she couldn't remember things well anymore, but mostly I was just so confused and saddened at what was happening, my grandma was still alive, but I would never get to play with her in their garden or collect rocks with her at the beach anymore. It was heartbreaking because it felt like we had already lost her, and it's heartbreaking still even now because I wish I hadn't been so scared and could've been there for her those last few years. You're absolutely on point about the guilt.

  • @Silver-rx1mh
    @Silver-rx1mh 3 года назад +449

    Personally I looked after both my parents who had dementia till they died, and dear god I wouldn't wish that condition, nor the emotional and physical strain it puts on the career on anyone. It's a horrific condition that strips away the person till there is nothing there and the worst part is in the early days they are fully aware of whats happening to them, so the combination of fear and panic is devastating. Now thats a REAL horror story....

    • @sophiejervis169
      @sophiejervis169 3 года назад +13

      My parents have looked after my grandma with Alzheimer's since my granddad passed march last year. Coupled with covid restrictions it's aged my parents terribly and they're so miserable

    • @Silver-rx1mh
      @Silver-rx1mh 3 года назад +7

      @@sophiejervis169 You have my deep felt sympathy. Its damn tough illness on everyone it touches.

  • @joyleilani5456
    @joyleilani5456 3 года назад +357

    My father died of Lewey body syndrome a few years ago, and whooo boy the body horror at the end really spooked me out. Degenerative diseases like that are incredibly awful.

  • @Rags_222
    @Rags_222 3 года назад +215

    This movie hit home for me I saw my grandpa forget his son his grandkids and everyone. Reliving memories from the 80's everyday repeating the same thing everyday, and no matter how many times we told him we are ur grandkids he couldn't remember me and my siblings names truly a terrifying disease

  • @emmas3754
    @emmas3754 3 года назад +191

    Ryan: stay safe and stay away from snakes
    Me and my pet snake watching the vid together: 👁👄👁

  • @Knightlaw
    @Knightlaw 3 года назад +212

    While I'm okay with the ending, I share some of your thoughts, it felt kind of rushed. In my opinion it could have been better with two changes, either the child was part of the family, like a grand daughter, or Sarah being the one eating alive by Deborah. The rest could be similar but adding some form to know what happen to Deborah after, like having no recollection of the events and dying peacefully next to her daughter.

    • @oregondude9411
      @oregondude9411 3 года назад +6

      I assumed in the beginning that Deborah would kill Sarah because she could tell Sarah hated her.

    • @robotjones7686
      @robotjones7686 3 года назад +23

      I agree, I thought Deborah going after Sarah or maybe a child of Sarah’s would keep the story consistent. Maybe it would also give more emphasis to how strained their relationship would become, eventually creating a ripple of trauma throughout the family. Then it becomes a generational horror that puts a genuine fear in the lineage and the audience.

    • @Knightlaw
      @Knightlaw 3 года назад +12

      @@robotjones7686 making the ending be that Sarah had to kill Deborah just to get possessed could have been a haunting ending, turning what originally Deborah's actions to protect her family become a curse that will follow each generation

    • @B0l0joe
      @B0l0joe Год назад +2

      in my opinion it's a shame that none of the characters learned how to turn on a light in either the house or the hospital (oo sudden power outage). The medical student also displayed no behaviour throughout the movie to show us that she was involved in medicine at all.

    • @squirrelgadget3498
      @squirrelgadget3498 Год назад +1

      ​@@B0l0joei work in healthcare and her getting freaked out and refusing to touch a dead body had me raising my brows. How do you go through med school without having to touch gross things?

  • @dionnebarry8654
    @dionnebarry8654 3 года назад +119

    I feel like the child who was almost consumed should’ve been Sarah’s daughter-it would’ve been another emotional layer with both of them learning how to process and deal with Deborah’s deteriorating state. It’s another monstrous layer because Deborah killed the man who possessed her to save her daughter-now she’s lost herself entirely and Sarah must save her daughter.

  • @blujaebird
    @blujaebird 3 года назад +163

    I have a severe mental disorder where I go into psychosis and lose touch with reality. "Possession" is the closest way I could describe what it feels like when that happens. I think that's what a lot of historical "possession" was as well, mental illness and epilepsy.

    • @CyclingUrchin
      @CyclingUrchin 3 года назад +22

      I have mood congruent psychosis too and I agree. I hear voices and feel things that aren't there. That's why I don't believe in the supernatural, it's almost always mental health

    • @Ghostpigeon5304
      @Ghostpigeon5304 3 года назад +18

      Tourette’s Syndrome was also likely attributed to possession back in the day and as some one that has it I can totally understand how someone without the modern day understanding of the condition would be convinced they were under the control of something otherworldly. The sensation of not being in control of your own body movement and speech is an uncanny one. Hell, that belief is still held by people today- my parents were once offered a cleansing ritual to cure me by a person they had just met.
      Tic attacks can be scary enough when you know what they are, I can’t imagine how they would be if you had led to believe they were because you were possessed.

    • @9roselove9
      @9roselove9 2 года назад +2

      @@CyclingUrchin energy can’t be created or destroyed so i mean ghosts exist

    • @giancarlocaballero7684
      @giancarlocaballero7684 2 года назад

      @@9roselove9 You do realize that when organisms die, their bodies are subsequently broken down by bacteria and scavenger animals, thus being used for further energy?

    • @BthIX
      @BthIX 2 года назад +4

      @@9roselove9 wtf does that mean? When you die your body stops taking in and converting energy and what energy remains is consumed by decomposers or turned into fire if you're cremated

  • @gregorybertrand645
    @gregorybertrand645 3 года назад +34

    I remember watching this movie in college with a group of friends, drunk, ready to make fun of what we thought would be a crappy found footage film. By the end, we were all sober and dead silent, affixed to the screen. We loved it.

  • @wstine79
    @wstine79 3 года назад +176

    It's not a proper Sunday without Ryan's Horror HOYEVER.

  • @RyubearSaysGao
    @RyubearSaysGao 3 года назад +58

    What broke my heart and is sometimes a thought, that keeps me up at night. The fact that this evil spirit waited, until Deborah was old and unable to resist. Because she was so strong, only her absolute lowest point would allow a possession. Even then, her will to fight was evident, until she no longer could.

  • @belinda35_77
    @belinda35_77 3 года назад +97

    When Deb unhinges her jaw and swallows that kids whole head....
    Ahhhhhhh WTAF???
    Very disturbing flick.
    I loved it!

  • @Iopax7
    @Iopax7 3 года назад +50

    Any scene where she notices the camera is on her and just starts staring when she's alone always got me eide-eyed

  • @lewiskazinsky7334
    @lewiskazinsky7334 3 года назад +423

    The worst thing about Alzheimer’s? One day, the person you love is gone and you don’t even realise it, because they’re still walking and talking. It takes them before you have a chance to say goodbye.

    • @jeremysiron9622
      @jeremysiron9622 3 года назад +4

      Yep, I never got to say a proper goodbye to my grandmother, it breaks my heart

    • @LexxiKitty
      @LexxiKitty 3 года назад +6

      Not having a proper goodbye is heartbreaking, but one thing you can at least know, is they knew you loved them dearly. Don't need words to say this =)

    • @lewiskazinsky7334
      @lewiskazinsky7334 3 года назад +3

      @@LexxiKitty Awh man, melted my heart ❤️

    • @LexxiKitty
      @LexxiKitty 3 года назад +2

      @@lewiskazinsky7334 =) 💕💜💕

    • @joefriday1327
      @joefriday1327 3 года назад +1

      The hardest comment ever...

  • @nessarolla
    @nessarolla 3 года назад +32

    I took care of my grandma during the last year of her life when the alzheimers got really bad. Sometimes she was ok but most times she would yell and curse at me, something she'd never done, and say how much she wanted to die. It was heartbreaking.

    • @terratheterribl
      @terratheterribl 2 года назад +4

      I've been living with my grandma for the past 7 years after her brain surgery and she has very similar problems. During her episode she says she wishes she was dead, cursing me and saying she wish she never married my grandfather or moved to our town. I spend an hour or 2 every other day calming her down. When she's in her right state of mind, she is the sweetest person in the world, just alittle forgetful about recent events. It's extremely emotionally taxing, but I promised her I would never put her in an old folks home when she was clear of mind. My biggest fear is that she will wake up one day and not know where I am or where she is.

  • @kyleshiflet9952
    @kyleshiflet9952 3 года назад +51

    I had a great grandmother and a grandmother die from it and it's hard to see them live with the disease its utterly heartbreaking

  • @Cheweeconga
    @Cheweeconga 3 года назад +343

    I feel like Ryan would enjoy Noroi: The Curse

    • @DaiHachiHachi
      @DaiHachiHachi 3 года назад +24

      Koji Shiraishi’s work needs more coverage in general. I hope for a Blu-ray release of Noroi, Occult and Cult someday.

    • @thegoddamnbatman1047
      @thegoddamnbatman1047 3 года назад +5

      Noroi was lame. Turning a demon into what amounts to a petulant child with relatable human behaviors isn't scary, it's stupid. Literally could have avoided all the problems of the film by stroking its ego. I don't find problems that are easily solved by not being an idiot compelling problems to solve. "Don't hurt nature, or a demon might kill you ooooh."

    • @SuperMurphy7
      @SuperMurphy7 3 года назад +5

      Noroi is the scariest movie i’ve seen! I loved it

    • @ryansinbela6396
      @ryansinbela6396 3 года назад +2

      Watch Accented Cinema’s video on it

    • @dimsumboy22
      @dimsumboy22 3 года назад +10

      Why is it called curse: the curse

  • @kittynapier4678
    @kittynapier4678 3 года назад +97

    One of the few “found footage” horror films that I actually love.

  • @Droemar
    @Droemar 2 года назад +27

    I think part of what allows Deborah her dignity is a kind of "fallen hero" element to her character. She stopped a terrible thing, and stepped up to the plate to do it. She didn't just call the police and hope for the best, she killed the guy. And especially for a woman in the 1950s, that was a huge risk.

  • @Dmitrisnikioff
    @Dmitrisnikioff 3 года назад +34

    "Stay away from snakes"
    Easy for you to say, Irelander

  • @MKLettis
    @MKLettis 3 года назад +44

    First two thirds of the film hit hard for me. My grandma didn't have alzheimers but she did suffer from kidney failure. Because of that and the grueling dialysis process I had to watch her slowly wither away and become a shell of what she was; just like the way Sarah had to watch Deborah slowly wither away due to the possession. Film gets kind of wacky at the end but I can definitely vouch for the authenticity of the portrayal of poor Deborah.
    Post video edit: Glad I wasn't the only one who found the ending meh. I just thought it was also too mean. Cancer kid is possessed by an evil serial killer and Deborah is a vegetable now. Would've rather had Deborah die trying to keep the bad guy from enacting his plan.

  • @sabz4u2be
    @sabz4u2be 3 года назад +1

    My grandfather had parkinsons disease dementia. It was terrifying trying to convince an 80 year old that no, we're not trying to get you to bed because we're trying to hurt you in some way you don't even know, we just want you to make it to tomorrow. One day in a state of paranoia, he knocked down my mother and tried to run out of the house. We put him in assisted living because we couldn't take care of him any longer, and he died a month later to covid. I lost my grandfather in February after not having seen him since Christmas, and it's hard thinking about how he would get confused and think we abandoned him, or the hospital was trying to hurt him. This movie resonated with me greatly. I love you all, thank you all for sharing your stories.

  • @flufflewarrior
    @flufflewarrior 3 года назад +9

    My grandmother started showing symptoms of Alzheimer disease after my grandfather died. She would ask everyday when he would return home and every time someone told her that he was dead, she broke down. I‘m so happy they are reunited again

  • @CrustTM
    @CrustTM 3 года назад +9

    Omg I just randomly recalled this movie today but couldn't remember the name for the life of me and then Ryan uploaded this, bless

  • @anomieanomalie
    @anomieanomalie 3 года назад +12

    I like that the possession wasn't a demon/the devil, but just some evil dude

  • @jacksuke
    @jacksuke 3 года назад +6

    YES. I've been waiting forever for you to review this movie! It scared the shit out of me

  • @Keykatriz
    @Keykatriz 3 года назад +4

    I watched this movie years ago when I was just coming to terms with the fact that my grandmother was beginning to suffer from Dementia. Since then it got severely worse (especially after the passing of her husband) and she passed away 6 months ago due to it. I think this movie is a great and respectful depiction of dementia. It really does feel like a possession sometimes...we had situations where she would get aggressive to people she loved for seemingly no reason. I think it would hurt too much to rewatch anytime soon, but I would like to see it again sometime. I also think the ending is just wild and lightens up the movie a lot.

  • @Pewpewpew182
    @Pewpewpew182 3 года назад +11

    That snake jaw scene is still etched into my mind 7 years later O_O’

  • @tite93
    @tite93 3 года назад +14

    I've always wanted someone to talk about this movie! It's a great hidden gem

  • @Cissablack708
    @Cissablack708 3 года назад +33

    I really loved this movie, but I also completely agree with you on the weakness of the ending they give us. I felt like they absolutely took the easy way out. Throughout the movie Sarah was the emotional center of the entire story and they never gave us closure on the end of her journey, we don't get to see what happens to her and how she reacted and coped with the ramifications of her actions as well as the death of her mother. We were supposed to be emotionally attached to her but they never finished the arch of her story.

    • @rhetiq9989
      @rhetiq9989 Год назад +1

      I definitely would've loved to see Sarah reacting to her mom trying to devour a kid as a whole snake-like

  • @gee7893
    @gee7893 3 года назад +4

    This was always a hard movie for me. Similar to Sarah, my mom was the primary caretaker for her mother. Watching my grandmother deteriorate as she got older was upsettingly scary, and when I got older and saw this movie for the first time, I found myself watching it through a lens not a lot of my friends could really understand. The horror of the movie is how the disease is depicted. I agree that the ending was a bit weak, but my goodness what a great movie overall. A hidden gem for sure! Excellent video, Ryan!

  • @unslaadkrosis9435
    @unslaadkrosis9435 3 года назад +6

    I had a schizophrenic great aunt and a great grandma suffering from Alzheimer's. Witnessing the interactions between them as a child was... Interesting to say the least

  • @mikemidwood9661
    @mikemidwood9661 3 года назад +1

    So glad you covered this. Been an underrated favorite of mine for awhile

  • @mullaoslo
    @mullaoslo 3 года назад +115

    I watched this movie completely blind..
    First it creeped me out since I saw similarities to when my grandma had alzeimers
    Then it got to that moment towards the end and I litteraly screamed out loud "what the hell is that!!!"
    Not many horror movies has made me do that..

    • @AxeKick80
      @AxeKick80 3 года назад +3

      How’d you know what was happening on the screen though 🤔

    • @mullaoslo
      @mullaoslo 3 года назад +1

      @@AxeKick80 😂😂😂

  • @watchthisnow2865
    @watchthisnow2865 3 года назад +1

    I remember some roommates watching this late one night when I got sucked into joining them. Snakes are my number one fear, so when we got the end with the little girl I straight up left the room. That scene is burned into my brain and I wish I could scrub it away.
    This is one of the better found footage films that manages to connect the family drama with the horror in a thematically effective way.
    Great analysis as always!

  • @laurenbenford6946
    @laurenbenford6946 3 года назад +8

    I loved this film. It's so underrated. The portrayal of alzheimer's and dementia is so accurate and heart breaking. The possession plot kind of creeps alongside it and there are some truly disturbing images within this film. The actress who played Deborah did a fantastic job. Its important to remember that people with dementia are still people and should be treated with dignity and respect.

  • @MrOrcshaman
    @MrOrcshaman 4 месяца назад +1

    My aunt died recently, and as horrible as it was to deal with, one thing we took away from it was that it wasn't has bad as what happened to my grandfather, her dad, or even her mother. He died from cancer on the brain as lost all sense of who he was, and my grandmother did so was weak and frail in the end, she could barely respond to anyone.
    My aunt passed on still herself, still in her own state of mind, knowing her children and grandchildren and husband were around her, I even spoke to her a few days before she died and bad as it was, it still felt calming that she was still my aunt I loved, not a person who lost all memory of their life like my grandfather did.

  • @kelath5555
    @kelath5555 3 года назад +10

    This movie hits so much different before and after losing a parent.

  • @alexpaddock1025
    @alexpaddock1025 3 года назад

    Glad you covered this, this is one of my all time favourites. That one shot of Deborah playing the Piano in the dark and smirking at the camera always gives me the chills.

  • @Katiethewizard
    @Katiethewizard 3 года назад +4

    I really loved the aspect of this movie where Deb is a very overbearing mother and inadvertently makes Sarah feel inadequate throughout her entire life, yet Sarah is still devastated by the state her mom is now in. It shows the weird situation a lot of people face when their parents are a source of self-hatred and tension, but when seeing them in a position of weakness it's still incredibly hard to handle and difficult to accept

  • @CatChaos369
    @CatChaos369 3 года назад +1

    As someone who works in a nursing home with many dementia patients and now having a relative diagnosed with it it kills me to think she will slowly fade away and a stranger will take her place just like it has for the patients we have

  • @daffodildaydream9730
    @daffodildaydream9730 3 года назад +5

    The Love Witch is one of the most visually stunning films I’ve seen. I highly recommend it.

  • @andymalum
    @andymalum 3 года назад +1

    I watched this movie and got a notification for this video and frankly, Ryan basically hit the nail on the head with how felt about it.

  • @aelitalove
    @aelitalove 3 года назад +3

    As a horror loving teen who was also home schooling myself to help take care of grandmother who had advanced alzheimers, this movie was terrifying. Really didn't help that my grandmother looked very similar to Debra Logan around the end of the movie either. I had a distinct memory of leaving my room to check on her late at night to find her walking down the hallway with a kitchen knife.... she asked me why this bag was left on the counter then handed it to me to put away lol had me spooked pretty bad

  • @ashleyhall6464
    @ashleyhall6464 3 года назад +2

    Another great analysis, Ryan! Always look forward to your videos every week.

  • @DarkGodJames
    @DarkGodJames 3 года назад +21

    I always thought of the child as a metaphor for the fact that alzheimers is a kind of genetic disease, therefore still alive

  • @normalhuman9878
    @normalhuman9878 3 месяца назад

    I wish I had the skills to make a story that accurately portrays the horror of feeling your body breaking down. The constant pain and exhaustion, the acceptance that you can never truly live a normal life, the mourning of the person you wanted to be, the inability to save yourself. It’s something I wish more people would understand.

  • @aidanfarnan4683
    @aidanfarnan4683 3 года назад +5

    Having lost a great aunt to vascular dementia recently, I can remember the very real pain it caused me and especially my parents watching this wonderful woman slowly lose herself in her past and get trapped in her own increasingly frail body and disordered memories. "The visit" upset me with its depictions of dementia, but this film, this film fucking broke me.

  • @plantemor
    @plantemor 3 года назад +2

    my issue with this movie is the same issue I had with Hereditary - It's touching on the horrors of the mundane and yet, they just can't help themselves and then go out and make it supernatural and bloated by the end of it - completely forgetting or ignoring what made the story so compelling in the first place.
    I think an understated horror movie that dares to commit to the horrors of mundane life is what is needed. I don't mind hinting at the supernatural to keep the audience guessing, but I have just seen time and time again how otherwise great, psyhological horrors have dissolved into bombastic supernatural, action packed noise because they don't have the balls to commit to their initial idea.

    • @calmexit6483
      @calmexit6483 3 года назад

      You should make that film.

    • @plantemor
      @plantemor 3 года назад

      @@calmexit6483 probably not gonna make a film but I write and draw comics. At some point I might get around to make a mundane horror. Currently I am making a mundane fantasy so I will be preoccupied with that one for awhile. :)

  • @jeremysiron9622
    @jeremysiron9622 3 года назад +6

    Dude this movie was downright disturbing, I’ve dealt with people with dementia in real life and it makes the movie that much scarier and tragic, it’s an underrated movie for sure

  • @lizwhitehead546
    @lizwhitehead546 3 года назад

    I've often wished you would cover this movie! I felt they did a really great job in the beginning in capturing the heartbreak that comes with the progression of dementia for those with the disease and the caretakers around them. Thank you so much love your videos!

  • @INSOMNIAREX
    @INSOMNIAREX 3 года назад +4

    Wow, the way they managed to make Deborah look like both herself and Hénri @9:46 is disturbingly clever.

  • @maniac7770
    @maniac7770 3 года назад +1

    I can confirm how distressing a loved one having something like Alzheimers or dementia can be. I remember one of the last times I saw my late grandmother, and it was like she didn't know I existed. We were having lunch, and she asked how I was doing, but thought I was my brother. When I said I wasn't him, she apologized, and thought I was my cousin, instead. I still haven't gotten over it, despite it being years ago, because I can't shake the feeling that despite my own life going on, I should've found ways to just be there more, so that she could remember one of the many grandkids that loved her so much.

  • @vicman3122
    @vicman3122 3 года назад +5

    The role of the Daugther on this movie is played by Anne Ramsay, best known as Lisa from Mad About You(sitcom), I think that she has aged very well and she still a great actress

  • @zaccy_binx
    @zaccy_binx 3 года назад

    Awesome video matey, glad you could finally mark it off your list

  • @impofstpete727
    @impofstpete727 3 года назад +4

    When my grandmother started to slip more and more it was scary. There was a moment when she didn't know who I was before she snapped back. The depiction of how she does stranger things at night is real as hell. People with Alzheimer's will do some unusual things after sundown. As the brain breaks down it starts to lose impulse control and the temporal lobe is kind of "sacrificed" to protect more vital functions. This film makes a solid use of the behavior covering the more supernatural aspects.

  • @FrostedTacos
    @FrostedTacos 3 года назад +1

    I remember watching this movie when my Uncle was going through Alzheimers.. it really does capture how heavy the disease is. There are many terrible diseases out there and I'm not trying to push them to the side, but nothing is more devastating and upsetting than watching someone you love dearly become someone else. For them to forget who you are. The time you shared with them. I'm glad they handled it so respectfully. Though the supernatural aspects were strange to me. Regardless I'm so glad Ryan talked about this one!

  • @iainmoore9890
    @iainmoore9890 3 года назад +99

    I’ve literally never been this earlier to a video, ever.

    • @KevSixFeet
      @KevSixFeet 3 года назад +1

      Samezies!

    • @batorsagandszerelem4474
      @batorsagandszerelem4474 3 года назад

      Me neither.

    • @Maso777
      @Maso777 3 года назад

      Same. And it’s a good one!

    • @jascemarie33
      @jascemarie33 3 года назад

      Same!

    • @austins.2495
      @austins.2495 3 года назад +3

      I've never understood why you think it's an accomplishment to view a RUclips video early. It litterally doesn't matter at all 🤷🏼‍♂️

  • @joshuagreen3083
    @joshuagreen3083 3 года назад +1

    I'm going to wax poetic right now but if it wasn't for you sir I wouldn't be digging deeper into horror films. I thank you for helping me better understand the themes and storytelling that comes with writing and filming horror films. With that being said I'm going to throw a hell of a curve ball here and say you should totally talk about We Are The Flesh or The Platform if you haven't already talked about The Platform. Also The Jacket would be cool to talk about to. Those are my suggestions at this point. We Are The Flesh may totally not be suitable for RUclips but the other two would be pretty good I think.

  • @hereitis2023
    @hereitis2023 3 года назад +5

    In a way it also mirrored The Autopsy of Jane Doe in having a great premise, setting, good hook, but didn't stick the landing.

  • @arthousefairyy
    @arthousefairyy 3 года назад

    This is one of my absolute favorite found footage horrors, and such a good video on it, loved all of your points. While not entirely a horror, Europa Report has some horror-adjacent as a movie set in space and it is one of my favorite underrated films

  • @MrMisuma
    @MrMisuma 3 года назад +13

    I deal with health anxiety everyday and it can be triggered by anything these days, so I REALLY appreciate that “warning” in the beginning.

    • @WetBoy
      @WetBoy 3 года назад

      Dear God you are pathetic

    • @ladyredl3210
      @ladyredl3210 3 года назад +2

      I do too, and it's been awful. Keep your head up, hopefully it'll get easier.

  • @groovymovie3213
    @groovymovie3213 3 года назад

    This movie genuinely disturbed me. And not even just on the horror level. It was not only scary, but sad. Would love to see you cover the original Fright Night!

  • @alljustletters
    @alljustletters 3 года назад +4

    i haven’t seen this but i think “relic” did a really good job with a similar premise

  • @jiub5454
    @jiub5454 3 года назад

    I was just binging your videos and remembered this movie and wondered if you did a video on it, only to see you made this video today... this is surely no coincidence and something must have somehow influenced my mind to tell me that Ryan just uploaded this.

  • @bryh555
    @bryh555 3 года назад +12

    Honestly....... Deborah’s actress is underrated. This looked like a hard role and found footage acting can come across so cheesy, but she feels real. she did such a good, horrifying, haunting performance and committed so hard to the role it’s part of what made this movie so much more immersive

  • @NYGiantsfan230
    @NYGiantsfan230 3 года назад +1

    Horror and thrillers coverage here is great!

  • @Ayden_B
    @Ayden_B 3 года назад +10

    YOOO a friend of mine from elementary school is in this movie! She played the little girl Deborah takes, I can’t imagine what it was like for a little third grader to film that scene where she almost gets ate😂

    • @craigab1976
      @craigab1976 3 года назад

      Have you spoken to her since the movie?

    • @Ayden_B
      @Ayden_B 3 года назад +1

      @@craigab1976 we were friends up until high school, we went to separate ones. I can say tho, she’s moved on from acting

  • @someguy92
    @someguy92 3 года назад +1

    this is an offering for the algorithm gods.
    love your work :)

  • @drewcifur3443
    @drewcifur3443 3 года назад +3

    I'm a PCA and i got into the field taking care of my grandpa who had alzheimers Parkinson's and dementia. It was hell but being able to care for him according to his wishes made it worth it. Having said that after what ive seen id kill myself before ever living through what I saw.

  • @jamiepalmer6452
    @jamiepalmer6452 3 года назад +1

    Great video Ryan! Here is your comment for the algorithm gods!!!

  • @lunarmagpie619
    @lunarmagpie619 3 года назад +22

    Currently in the process of losing my grandmother, we’re in the stage where she’s bitterly mean and terrified all the time. This film understands the parts that hurt the most. Also doesn’t hurt that there’s a lesbian who isn’t used for shock or exploitation tbh

  • @Neflame
    @Neflame 3 года назад

    I was very happy to see this video pop up because this is one of those films that I'll likely not watch precisely because of the Alzheimer's subject matter and remembering how the disease caused my grandmother to, well, "disappear" shortly before she passed. So I'm very happy to hear that the film treats the subject with the respect and dignity one should. On a different note, a horror film I would love to hear your perspective on is "The Shrine."

  • @devingallucci4829
    @devingallucci4829 3 года назад +3

    Time to sync this up with everywhere at the end of time

  • @DarkWatcherDS
    @DarkWatcherDS 3 года назад +2

    I remember telling friends that the ending felt like the studio told them "Yeah by the way you got 30 minutes left in the movie" because they put so much beautiful work into the slow burn of the Alzheimer's and the dripping realization of the supernatural that they forgot entirely that there was a time limit and just had to quickly throw an ending in there. If the movie had an extra 30 minutes on the run time I'm sure the ending would have been incredible

  • @rajupadhyay3855
    @rajupadhyay3855 3 года назад +3

    This really is one of those movies which could have been extremely amazing barring the terrible ending.

  • @Blackpilho
    @Blackpilho 3 года назад +1

    I was an adolescent when my grandad was diagnosed with Alzheimer. I didn't knew him well but the sadness it caused to my grandma was devastating. I saw him only once when he was in a specialized hospital and when I met him I saw in his eyes that he didn't knew who I was. As horrible as it sound, I never saw him again. I didn't want to see him desesperatly trying to remember who I was...

  • @clairikus9743
    @clairikus9743 3 года назад +4

    Hey Ryan, you should do a video on a movie called "Last shift." It was the first movie to ever really spook me.

  • @raffibarrows3584
    @raffibarrows3584 3 года назад +2

    Love your content man! Discovered so many great movies because of you!

  • @adamfenix213
    @adamfenix213 3 года назад +35

    Man I remember how depressing the ending is, especially for Deborah.

    • @oregondude9411
      @oregondude9411 3 года назад

      It was actually a happy ending. Deborah wasn't possessed anymore, and she won't go to prison for her acts.

    • @adamfenix213
      @adamfenix213 3 года назад +18

      @@oregondude9411 she's not possessed sure, but alzheimers has still ran its course if you look at her when she's deemed "unfit for trial". She might not be getting jailed, but she's more or less on her deathbed healthwise.

    • @oregondude9411
      @oregondude9411 3 года назад

      @@adamfenix213 true

    • @R3l3ntl3sss
      @R3l3ntl3sss 3 года назад

      @@adamfenix213 worse than jail

  • @GregBlackmanMusic
    @GregBlackmanMusic 3 года назад

    Really glad to see you cover this one. I've always thought the performances were a cut above the usual possession fayre.

  • @ADMG
    @ADMG 3 года назад +72

    Day 1 of recommending Ryan to watch the Empty Man.

    • @RyanHollinger
      @RyanHollinger  3 года назад +34

      I need a pitch because I’ve never seen it!

    • @derekconnors4128
      @derekconnors4128 3 года назад +28

      @@RyanHollinger Here is the pitch: The Ring, In the Mouth of Madness, Candyman, and David Fincher rolled into one.

    • @burtbiggum499
      @burtbiggum499 3 года назад +8

      That was quick

    • @mattgilbert7347
      @mattgilbert7347 3 года назад

      @@RyanHollinger
      It's about Jacques Derrida High School.

    • @harrisonlee9585
      @harrisonlee9585 3 года назад +6

      @@derekconnors4128 One of the very few movies to actually get the mood of Cosmic Horror somewhat right.
      Also an all time example of the movie being wildly different than the trailer.

  • @vincentwoodhead6411
    @vincentwoodhead6411 3 года назад

    Yay one of my recommendations got done!! A really rewatchable, solid horror film with well-acted characters

    • @moviedismemberment3011
      @moviedismemberment3011 3 года назад

      There are some amazing pieces of info that you only get from the second watch.
      Like Deborah tearing at her skin. Or should we say - shedding her skin.

  • @DJtheBlack-RibbonedRose
    @DJtheBlack-RibbonedRose 3 года назад +34

    Let us take a moment to congratulate the person consistently recommended this one to Ryan: Congrats my friend, I hope it was worth the wait. 😊

  • @lucym7438
    @lucym7438 3 года назад +2

    Thank you for finally giving in to all the comments

    • @RyanHollinger
      @RyanHollinger  3 года назад +2

      Oh yeah! I read everything!

    • @lucym7438
      @lucym7438 3 года назад

      @@RyanHollinger hahaha! I appreciate you doing that, hope there's not too many negative ones

  • @ComiskeyProjects
    @ComiskeyProjects 3 года назад +6

    Woah early for once to get my weekly dose of "however"

  • @maniac6933
    @maniac6933 3 года назад +1

    Really great movie, surprised and excited to see you covered it.
    Ryan, I know your niche now seems to be horror movies, but I noticed your early vids had some videogame coverage as well, I would love to see your takes on some horror games from the last few years (like RE7 being a mixed love letter, at least at first, to Evil Dead and Texas Chainsaw Massacre) Or Alien Isolation being possibly one of the great entries in the entire franchise, being up there with Alien and Aliens.

  • @silence_dais
    @silence_dais 3 года назад +3

    I really liked this one, and while the ending is the usual "downer ending", I still think it works really well all around. I love Last Exorcism but I definitely believe this one is all around better.

  • @billgreen6144
    @billgreen6144 3 года назад

    I really appreciate the video - for some reason, I've just kept this film at arm's length but I may have to give it a watch now.

  • @nickmartin2300
    @nickmartin2300 3 года назад +12

    Have you ever thought about tackling shows like "The Haunting of Hill House", Or "The Kingdom"?

  • @nickbarber100
    @nickbarber100 3 года назад

    This was a fun movie from what I remember. Gonna watch another time. Thanks for the videos man.

  • @danyalahmed3995
    @danyalahmed3995 3 года назад +4

    Hey Ryan! I know it's not quite in your wheelhouse but I think an interesting artistic piece that capture some of the ideas of Alzheimer's and its horror is the album Everything at the end of time by the caretaker. It's quite long, but it's so deep and interesting that you probably will find some fascination with it

  • @liviolangella2777
    @liviolangella2777 3 года назад

    You’re recommending so many good movies that I need another life to watch them all.