The Purgation (2015)

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The Purgation: Directed by Elaine Chu. With Tiffany Kieu, Kat Johnston, Kate Dauphin, Tom Walsh. Iris thinks she’s going crazy. To stay sane, she must confront her past by revisiting the site of a childhood trauma – the old county asylum.

“Years after a childhood trauma, a woman returns to her haunted hometown to shoot a story on the abandoned asylum where a horrific accident occurred and finds that sheu0026#39;s become part of a lingering curse attached to her past making her question her very sanity the deeper she goes.u003cbr/u003eu003cbr/u003eThis was quite the decent if wholly flawed effort. One of the filmsu0026#39; better aspects is the fact that this one goes for the rather strong sense of atmosphere and suspense in this one which manages to really make this creepier than expected. Among the better aspects of this is the filmu0026#39;s great opening, where it shows the making-of one of their home videos in the asylum where the creepy, chilling atmosphere located in the dark, dirty location is taken to a nice extreme with the location and setting alongside the fact that theyu0026#39;re shooting the film there which does the nice thing of putting kids in danger. Back in the present day, thereu0026#39;s plenty to like here with the journey back to the area and stopping off at the same place makes for some creepy moments throughout here as they explore the same areas where it has the same events being replayed as before where the imaginary friend begins to reappear and the different trappings within the tunnels that echo what they went through as kids. With the vast amount of time spent on her returning to her childhood hometown and how theyu0026#39;ve come to terms with the incident as adults, thereu0026#39;s some fun to be had here with the now demented and delusion network of friends she has in the town who have been affected by the situation and how the curse of the asylum still lingers which makes for a great background to build off the main storyline here within the film involving the crazed nun and the events at the sanitarium. While these elements here make for quite a solid framework here, thereu0026#39;s still some troubling matters here. The biggest issue here is the filmu0026#39;s incredibly low budget which hampers the film more often than anything else here, as the supposedly creepy sanitarium is clearly more of a bunker with a few redressed walls to signify the different areas within it. Likewise, thereu0026#39;s very little about the way it features such a pronounced and complex storyline here on this kind of work as thereu0026#39;s so much going on here that tends to get glossed over in barely-there segments only to feature absolutely rushed and frenzied scare scenes rushing past the needed plot points this one attempts. Going from what was supposed to the nunu0026#39;s history and connection to the asylum with what she did there and how that matters to them is just one of the rather confusing matters brought up here that really needed more exposure to get a full understanding of, and how it all tied into the rushed finale is a big issue for this one to overcome. The last issue here is the filmu0026#39;s rather rushed finale which really doesnu0026#39;t make much sense and tends to go by so quickly that there are some missing pieces here because of what happens and itu0026#39;s a bad note to end it on. Itu0026#39;s quite decent enough but does have its problems.u003cbr/u003eu003cbr/u003eRated R: Graphic Violence, Graphic Language, and children-in- jeopardy.”

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