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Darkness Falls (2003)
Released By: Sony Pictures Home Entertainment   Rating: N/A   In Theaters: N/A
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Studio: Sony Pictures Home Entertainment
Genre: Horror
MPAA Rating: N/A
Director: Jonathan Liebesman
Language: English
Official Website: http://www.sonypictures.com/movies/darknessfalls/
Theatrical Release: N/A
Home Video Release: 4/22/2003
Cast: Chaney Kley, Emma Caulfield
Published ID: 575126
UPC: 043396098121, 043396267312,
Plot: Children have a very good reason to be afraid of the dark in this flashy horror story. Matilda Dixon was a genially eccentric woman who, in the 1850s, lived in a New England town known as Darkness Falls. Matilda was well known to the local children for her habit of paying them for teeth they'd lost, but when two youngsters mysteriously disappeared, Matilda was lynched by an angry mob wrongly convinced that she had murdered the kids. In the year 2002, former Darkness Falls resident Kyle Walsh (Chaney Kley) lives in Las Vegas and is still desperately afraid of the dark since a childhood run-in with the ghost of Matilda Dixon left him severely traumatized. While police and psychiatrists scoffed at Kyle's stories about Matilda's spirit, his childhood friend Caitlin (Emma Caulfield) is alarmed when her nine-year-old brother Michael (Lee Cormie) begins having nightmares very much like those which disturbed Kyle's rest for years. Like Kyle, Michael has little luck convincing most grown-ups that the white-robed specters he sees in the dark are real, so Caitlin asks Kyle to return to Darkness Falls to help get to the bottom of his story. Darkness Falls marked the directorial debut of filmmaker Jonathan Liebesman. ~ Mark Deming, All Movie Guide
IDDateTimeTitleReviewHelpfulVotesTotalVotes
Have to throw in my lot with those that really liked it...
Added 10/23/2009

Wow...there's a whole lotta hatin' goin' on in THIS place, I see...

Well, while the majority of you are sharpening your pitchforks and lighting your torches, I'll take advantage of the opportunity to put MY two cents in on this little flick.

I loved this movie. I thought the concept was good (I mean, why do we assume the tooth fairy looks like Tinkerbell and is just inherently friendly? Why is it tough to believe that there may be a darker legend behind her like there is in most fairy tales? Why is it easy to accept an undead revenant with a hockey mask haunts a summer camp, but not the idea that there is a supernatural being that must conform to a set of celestial rules?), and the cinematography was positively chilling (the scene near the beginning in the hallway outside the safety of the bright bathroom is the stuff of Lovecraftian nightmares).

Preying on our inherent fear of the dark was a masterstroke...and I've read the complaints about how light was her downfall, but lightning didn't bother her...well, why do we swallow that in some vampire movies crosses ward away the villains, but in others they can use them as toothpicks?

Add to that element the use of the tooth fairy, as aforementioned a friendly and "safe" element of almost all of our childhoods, weaving her legends of how you must be asleep and never see her into something sinister, and you have a very scary movie.

I look at any horror film in the respect of 'does it scare me? Does it touch some psychological button that, in my suspension of disbelief that I carry into watching ANY film, takes me back to my childhood, lying there in the darkness, seeing the shadows from the streetlight and wondering just what those little noises were that you always hear in a quiet house?'...it seems that most of the reviewers here rely on what is shown on the screen being solely responsible for making you afraid...and to an extent, I believe that also, but in my opinion if a film has an element that reaches into you and finds that one spot to place a cold hand and remind you that just maybe there's more out there in the dark than you know about, then it's done it's job.

Like any movie, Darkness Falls has it's flaws...but it found that child in the dark that's still somewhere in me...maybe if any of you readers out there still keep that same child somewhere in your psyche, you'll enjoy this movie as much as I did.

0 out of 0 people found this helpful.
Scared Stiff!
Added 7/13/2009

Saw the movie, owned the movie, lost the movie. I had to buy it again but it was worth it. Now its a part of my collection. The introduction alone will have you bite all ten finger nails just before you start on the toes. Losing your last tooth can be horrifying after watching this movie. I think i have developed a phobia. Now i sleep with a flashlight
0 out of 0 people found this helpful.
You will pay for tooth decay
Added 6/16/2009

No molar is safe. The tooth fairy is coming for your soul...BWAHAHAHAH!!!! Aquafresh will not save you!

Yeah, this is as ridiculous as it sounds. A demonic creature comes to collect its prize while the youth are sleeping. But this demented fairy gets infuriated when it finds out that little kids don't have grillz?!? The little buggers keep sticking rotten little baby teeth under their pillow, which have no trade in value at the pawn shop. WTF?

I kept expecting this to be a movie about bad dreams or mentally deranged children or something. But no, it really is about a tooth fairy (sigh). In all fairness, this was the best tooth fairy movie I have ever seen.

0 out of 0 people found this helpful.
A NICE LITTLE CREEPER
Added 5/18/2009

If you're looking for lotsa' gore, gratuitous sex scenes, and the usual cliches that seem to drive the so-called plots of most horror movies don't bother watching DARKNESS FALLS. There are some nice thrills, plenty of atmosphere, and some genuinely decent acting by the leads. Liebesman did a good job pacing the movie as well. It's certainly not in the league of CARRIE, HOLLOWEEN, or THE EXORCIST, but it's far from boring.
0 out of 0 people found this helpful.
Dullness Falls...
Added 4/22/2009

I don't know what it is that drives hollywood to crank out movies like this. Well, okay, it has something to do w/ corporations making zillions of dollars on whatever they decide we "must" see, but I digress. DARKNESS FALLS is another generic spooker that starts out fairly cool, then descends quickly into re-tread territory. It could have been a very original ghost story w/ a terrifying ghoul. Instead, it's a kid-vid w/ a few "bad" words and some minor blood tossed in. I have seen some well-made PG-13 movies (The Ring, The Grudge, Disturbia, etc.). DARKNESS FALLS was a bland movie that I wanted to enjoy. Alas, I didn't...
0 out of 0 people found this helpful.
Have to throw in my lot with those that really liked it...
Added 10/23/2009

Wow...there's a whole lotta hatin' goin' on in THIS place, I see...

Well, while the majority of you are sharpening your pitchforks and lighting your torches, I'll take advantage of the opportunity to put MY two cents in on this little flick.

I loved this movie. I thought the concept was good (I mean, why do we assume the tooth fairy looks like Tinkerbell and is just inherently friendly? Why is it tough to believe that there may be a darker legend behind her like there is in most fairy tales? Why is it easy to accept an undead revenant with a hockey mask haunts a summer camp, but not the idea that there is a supernatural being that must conform to a set of celestial rules?), and the cinematography was positively chilling (the scene near the beginning in the hallway outside the safety of the bright bathroom is the stuff of Lovecraftian nightmares).

Preying on our inherent fear of the dark was a masterstroke...and I've read the complaints about how light was her downfall, but lightning didn't bother her...well, why do we swallow that in some vampire movies crosses ward away the villains, but in others they can use them as toothpicks?

Add to that element the use of the tooth fairy, as aforementioned a friendly and "safe" element of almost all of our childhoods, weaving her legends of how you must be asleep and never see her into something sinister, and you have a very scary movie.

I look at any horror film in the respect of 'does it scare me? Does it touch some psychological button that, in my suspension of disbelief that I carry into watching ANY film, takes me back to my childhood, lying there in the darkness, seeing the shadows from the streetlight and wondering just what those little noises were that you always hear in a quiet house?'...it seems that most of the reviewers here rely on what is shown on the screen being solely responsible for making you afraid...and to an extent, I believe that also, but in my opinion if a film has an element that reaches into you and finds that one spot to place a cold hand and remind you that just maybe there's more out there in the dark than you know about, then it's done it's job.

Like any movie, Darkness Falls has it's flaws...but it found that child in the dark that's still somewhere in me...maybe if any of you readers out there still keep that same child somewhere in your psyche, you'll enjoy this movie as much as I did.

0 out of 0 people found this helpful.
Scared Stiff!
Added 7/13/2009

Saw the movie, owned the movie, lost the movie. I had to buy it again but it was worth it. Now its a part of my collection. The introduction alone will have you bite all ten finger nails just before you start on the toes. Losing your last tooth can be horrifying after watching this movie. I think i have developed a phobia. Now i sleep with a flashlight
0 out of 0 people found this helpful.
You will pay for tooth decay
Added 6/16/2009

No molar is safe. The tooth fairy is coming for your soul...BWAHAHAHAH!!!! Aquafresh will not save you!

Yeah, this is as ridiculous as it sounds. A demonic creature comes to collect its prize while the youth are sleeping. But this demented fairy gets infuriated when it finds out that little kids don't have grillz?!? The little buggers keep sticking rotten little baby teeth under their pillow, which have no trade in value at the pawn shop. WTF?

I kept expecting this to be a movie about bad dreams or mentally deranged children or something. But no, it really is about a tooth fairy (sigh). In all fairness, this was the best tooth fairy movie I have ever seen.

0 out of 0 people found this helpful.
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