The House on Pine Street (2015)

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The House on Pine Street: Directed by Aaron Keeling, Austin Keeling. With Emily Goss, Taylor Bottles, Cathy Barnett, Jim Korinke. A psychological horror about a young woman coping with an unwanted pregnancy after moving into a seemingly haunted house.

“While Iu0026#39;m no movie expert, I am a horror fan and not easily scared. Sadly, thereu0026#39;s so long between a horror movie which really delivers, but this one did rather well I thought. What makes it all the more joyful, is the lack of reliance on special effects. Itu0026#39;s well paced and uses the art of suggestion rather than cheep jump-scares, a style I appreciate. Furthermore, I found myself sympathizing greatly with the female protagonist, another key element in a good horror movie. This movie keeps the viewer speculating and guessing until the end, which I find is the turning point of a scary movie. Nothing is more scary that the unknown, as we well know. This brings me to the only regret I have about this movie, -the ending. I wonu0026#39;t reveal anything, but as most suspense movies, the ending leaves the viewer a bit disappointed. I for my part can forgive the movie for this, since it relates to the point above. Itu0026#39;s the unknown which is most scary, the sum of possible explanations. As soon as the movie settles on one specific explanation, most of the suspense is diffused. Donu0026#39;t let this keep you from viewing the movie though. I promise, it postpones the inevitable solution as long as possible. All in all; no masterpiece, but delivers as a horror movie.”

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