Incarnate
After a single mother witnesses terrifying symptoms of demonic possession in her 11-year-old son, a wheelchair-bound scientist with the ability to enter the subconscious minds of the possessed is called for help.
1 October 1950, Chicago, Illinois, USA
19 September 1967, Big Spring, Texas, USA
19 April 1981, Bogotá, Colombia
2 August 1973, Basel, Switzerland
8 November 1978, Sydney, New South Wales, Australia
16 January 1962
5 September 1976, Leiderdorp, Zuid-Holland, Netherlands
8 March 1972, Northern Beaches, Sydney, New South Wales, Australia
1 June 2003, Clearwater Beach, Florida, USA
September 19, 1967 in Big Spring, Texas, USA
January 19, 2017
This horror movie tries to set itself apart from other demon-possession movies by inventing an interesting new mythology, but eventually it gets tired, bogged down and lost in its own rule book.January 06, 2017
The mixture of genres and the well-executed twist offered by Incarnation's premise, above the usual formula, is what saves it from burning. [Full review in Spanish]December 02, 2016
Incarnate, much like its central character at key moments, barely seems to have a pulse.January 05, 2017
A pile of cliches under a mountain of stupidity. [Full review in Portuguese.]December 02, 2016
Incarnate is such a pointless bit of hackwork that it almost makes the recent horror dud Shut In seem focused by comparison.December 02, 2016
Strident rhetoric is required for describing Brad Peyton's latest film, a maddening hodgepodge of ideas that range from undercooked to unoriginal.December 02, 2016
Offers a relatively fresh take on standard-issue exorcism-melodrama tropes, along with a performance by Aaron Eckhart that is more than persuasive enough to encourage the investment of a rooting interest.December 02, 2016
Dense with plot and mythology, the film is refreshingly unpredictable - if only because guessing what comes next would require understanding what the hell is going on.January 12, 2017
The result isn't even close to what could be expected, since its ending it's like a pastiche of many things and nothing at the same time. [Full review in Spanish]December 31, 2016
The preposterous climax is merely a ploy to ensure a sequel -- a proposition that is scarier than anything else in Incarnate.December 02, 2016
It's all a wild jumble of half-baked, derivative ideas and arbitrary rules, all of which add up to a suspense-free horror narrative as murky as its lighting.January 05, 2017
A horror film that recaptures elements of the classics to mix them indistinctly and clumsily into a fragile reflection on dreams and time, and ends up being a predictable disaster. [Full review in Spanish]