IMDb > Dread (2009)

Overview

User Rating:
6.9/10   90 votes
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Director:
Anthony DiBlasi
Writers (WGA):
Anthony DiBlasi (screenplay)
Clive Barker (short story "Dread")
Contact:
View company contact information for Dread on IMDbPro.
Release Date:
29 January 2010 (USA) more
Genre:
Horror more
Plot:
Three college students set out to document what other people dread most. | add synopsis
NewsDesk:
(132 articles)
Sneak-Preview: Fangoria #289 (January 2010)
 (From Fangoria. 6 November 2009, 9:29 AM, PST)

Exclusive: Director Anthony Diblasi on 'Dread'
 (From FEARnet. 4 November 2009, 7:30 PM, PST)

User Comments:
An Impressive Debut at Montreal's 2009 Fantasia Festival more (2 total)

Cast

  (Credited cast)

Jackson Rathbone ... Stephen Grace
Shaun Evans ... Quaid

Hanne Steen ... Cheryl Fromm

Laura Donnelly ... Abby

Jonathan Readwin ... Joshua Shaw

Vivian Gray ... Tabitha Swan
Carl McCrystal ... Axe Man
rest of cast listed alphabetically:
Sarah Ball ... Wife
Steven Clarke ... Bruno
Adam Davenport ... Alex Hustler

Elissa Dowling ... Tamsin Kendall

Paloma Faith ... Clara Thornhill

Erin Gavin ... Valerie
Siobhan Hewlett ... Quaid's Mother
Matt Jessup ... Bobby How
Kieran Murphy ... Young Quaid
Leon Ockenden ... Jimmy Cake
Ian Pirie ... Husband
Elspeth Rae ... Samantha
Cheyanne Raymond ... Zooey
Kerry Ann Smith ... Nurse #1
Zoe Stollery ... Shauna
Michelle Tate ... Jo Jo Lospecchio
Eva Wyrwal ... Roo Roo
more
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Additional Details

Runtime:
108 min
Country:
UK
Language:
English
Color:
Color
Certification:
Netherlands:16
Filming Locations:
Boston, Massachusetts, USA more

FAQ

This FAQ is empty. Add the first question.
9 out of 11 people found the following comment useful.
An Impressive Debut at Montreal's 2009 Fantasia Festival, 16 July 2009
8/10
Author: Craig McPherson from Montreal, Canada

Based on the Clive Barker short story, Dread, which made its world premiere at the 2009 edition of Montreal's Fantasia film festival, is remarkable on two fronts: Barker's striking departure from his traditional macabre story lines, and Anthony DiBlasi's impressive directorial debut.

The story unfolds with two college students, Steve (Twilight's Jackson Rathbone) and Quaid (Shaun Evans), agreeing to work together to create a documentary of people's innermost fears. The two put out a call for candidates and document their interviews on video.

An expert manipulator, Quaid is able to coax these troubled souls into revealing their innermost demons; deeply personal revelations they would otherwise never dream of discussing in public, much less on camera. Meanwhile Quaid harbors deep seated psychological scars of his own, having been a childhood survivor of the brutal home invasion axe slaying of his parents at the hands of a mysterious psycho.

Espousing the belief that by confronting one's ultimate fear an individual will either overcome their phobia or be consumed by it, Quaid convinces the more demure Steve, and friends Cheryl and Abby to participate in the study. Unknown to everyone involved, however, is Quaid's desire to take things to the next level, progressing beyond mere interviews to the actual physical and psychological nightmare of tackling their fears head on.

DiBlasi displays a remarkably talented hand at spinning a yarn that incorporates introspective, character-driven drama and some spectacularly jolting and emotionally moving sequences. While deviating out of necessity from the plot structure of Barker's original story, which didn't provide much "meat" for a feature length film, Barker equally deserves kudos for providing DiBlasi with a twisted tale that is firmly rooted in the real world, where human cruelty is infinitely more tangible and terrifying than anything the supernatural can invoke.

Led by Rathbone and Evans, the young cast turns in uniformly strong, nuanced and intensely emotional performances not typically found in this genre. Among the standouts is Hanne Steen, who plays Cheryl, a friend infatuated with Steve who bears the curse of a disfiguring skin pigmentation that covers a third of her face and body. Steen deftly manages to convey her character's sensitivity and long held pain in a manner that the viewer can readily attune to, earmarking her as a future talent to watch.

As debuts go DiBlasi's Dread is as solid, slick, engaging and thought provoking as it is terrifying, making this a must see, not merely for fans of the genre, but anyone with untold skeletons in their closet.

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