Get 25% off @KudoPopcorn with the code BADD at KudoSnacks.com/discount/BADD What an interesting film this was. A24 knocked it out of the park on this one. What was your reaction? What did we miss? Badd Medicine Arcade channel kzitem.info/rock/HIstVk00GtduPIXlJLdC3A Early Drops & Full Reactions on YT Memberships & Patreon: www.patreon.com/baddmedicine Backup channel Subscribe here kzitem.info/rock/1CLUwA27dz-94o3FR0o3xg
@hardikkumar1575
9 ай бұрын
please watch animal movie it is a blockbustr in india, your video will do well also
@vivacious_me
9 ай бұрын
This reaction is EVERYTHING I WOULD HOPE IT WOULD BE. Oaks reactions took me out 😂
@jenloveshorror
9 ай бұрын
Hey oak, don't do the clicking sound... apparently that's how they summon the demon in our language that's how u say its name or that's the story I heard. Is it really true though???, think il just not test that theory out !!!! Love u guys, Merry Christmas fyi or Happy Holidays if Christmas not ur thing. Sending yall love cause saw a few haters in the comments. Just ignore them. U guys are great & ur real fans know it!!❤💞❤
@Renoistic
9 ай бұрын
This might be my favorite horror movie.
@pollyparrot9447
9 ай бұрын
@@jenloveshorror The best explanation of the clicking that I have seen is that Paimon is always depicted riding a camel and the click is the noise a camel driver makes to control the animal.
@rynepaschall5973
9 ай бұрын
Suggested this to my family for our annual “family horror trip to the movies”. They didn’t let me choose a movie for 2 years afterwards
@kdizzle901
9 ай бұрын
Lmfao…..it’s a MASTERPIECE my mom hated it too but doesn’t like horror
@rynepaschall5973
9 ай бұрын
@@kdizzle901 I don’t think my mom has even forgiven me still to this day lol
@jeepersmcgee3466
9 ай бұрын
@@kdizzle901after seeing it, I told my mom that it's fantastic but it's also the very last movie she should ever watch
@5050TM
9 ай бұрын
Let's go to the movies they said. It'll be fun they said. Be glad you didn't get disowned 😅😂
@madeofwax92
9 ай бұрын
We went for a friend's birthday on a whim. He's not even a big horror guy, just picked a movie we had heard the name of. My wife, who has had a sibling die young, was inconsolable. Incredible movie, but it was not the best viewing experience lol
@pollyparrot9447
9 ай бұрын
I thought the depiction of Peter's reaction to Charlie's death was very believable. 'This isn't happening. I'll go home now and go to bed and in the morning everything will be normal again.'
@purpleprinc3
8 ай бұрын
Indeed, I thought the depiction was absolutely spot on, I would have probably acted the same way, just completely blocked it out, didn't exist, go home sleep and everything will be honky dory.
@yvonnesanders4308
8 ай бұрын
Intense shock
@misantrope6267
8 ай бұрын
Intense shock while you're high is also WILD@@yvonnesanders4308
@ladaddy19
7 ай бұрын
The Charlie scene is listening to 4 of your friends getting slaughtered upstairs, seeing a shadowy figure walk down the stairs after the screaming stopped, locking your door and sleeping for six hours. That's what shock and fear (maybe a little THC or liquor ) can do to you. Maybe not everyone, but definitely some. When I first saw the Charlie scene, I thought it was extremely plausible. In a batshit movie where nothing seems real, that little bit of realism makes the movie that much better.
@Russelshackleford
7 ай бұрын
What people also don’t put together, is that’s also the beginning of his possession, it’s a combination of that and his shock that cause him to behave strangely.
@vickylandry51
9 ай бұрын
Did I just stop what I was doing to watch this? Yes absolutely lol Toni Collette is a powerhouse and a master of her craft. This movie is phenomenal
@BaddMedicine
9 ай бұрын
Toni crushed it!
@zymir5494
9 ай бұрын
SAME 😂
@Aragonsdick5170
9 ай бұрын
Me too.. 😂. The fact that this movie was made feels like a rare gem to be blessed by it. As a horror fan, this movie disturbed me the most.
@Khawlah.90
9 ай бұрын
same. literally paused a movie halfway to watch this. 🤣
@rangergreen1935
9 ай бұрын
Same
@carlosriveraauthor
9 ай бұрын
Toni Collette' screams from finding Charlie to the bedroom to the funeral are probably the most harrowing screams I've ever heard in a movie. They chilled me to the bone. The sense of grief and horror perfectly complement how surreal some of the scenes are. Alex Wolff killed it. He's so natural. When he starts crying after the "Charlie summon" it's probably how a traumatized high school kid would react. Not trying to act all cool.
@a.j.1819
9 ай бұрын
Hers and Florence Pugh‘s cries of grief at the beginning of Midsommar! So raw and real.
@Respect2theFallen
9 ай бұрын
@@a.j.1819 honestly Florence Pugh did such a great job however Midsommar was disappointing. The beginning was heart-wrenching and dark then the rest of the movie was too bright characters meh and then I didn't like the direction it went. Her scream and Toni Collettes do parallel eachother though. I almost felt their pain
@piratsnygg
8 ай бұрын
@@Respect2theFallen It's so interesting, cause I feel the exact same way, but the complete opposite; I love Midsommar, and feel really meh about this one. I see it a lot too (people loving one and being blasé about the other).
@eric9061
8 ай бұрын
Alex supposedly had to go to therapy after filming the movie... ;-;
@lesyeuxsansvisage1157
8 ай бұрын
@@Respect2theFallenThink of it as her mind escaping the horror of her reality. Family, friends that want her, it’s beautiful and sunny, and she is protected. It’s meant to feel like the Wizard of Oz, a happy place, with darkness beneath.
@andrewmcmurray9580
9 ай бұрын
Ok so Oak is right, Paimon was placed in Charlie. The grandmother had been attempting this ritual for decades. The reason why they put him into her and not Peter is explained by a line early on where Annie said she kept Peter away from her mother as a baby, but let her mother help more with Charlie. It's also suggested that the grandmother tried with her own son, who was "schizophrenic" and killed himself. He wasn't schizophrenic, he was possessed by Paimon, who did not yet have full control. This movie's rewatchability is off the charts because of little details like that.
@Violetsareblue092
9 ай бұрын
Totally agree on the rewatchability. So many things make sense now like when Annie tried to light Peter on fire, why she didn’t want to have him but her mother pressured her, why she told him she wasn’t trying to kill him but she was instead trying to save him. I also thought the bird thing was just a way to show this girl was weird the first time I watched it, but now I see it as Charlie knowing what was going to happen to her/possibly Paimon planning how to leave his female body and move into a male body. At the very least it’s some foreshadowing that’s for sure lol.
@quirkypurple3
9 ай бұрын
i saw this movie not long after it came out, and decided to show it to my dad for halloween last year. it was great seeing the dialogue and events in the beginning of the movie with new hindsight. definitely has a lot of replay value.
@Andy-roid
9 ай бұрын
For sure about the "schizophrenic" son, but I wonder then is the implication that Peter didn't die when he jumped out the window? Cuz Paimon didn't have full control prior to that, so if Annie's brother escaped his fate by dying then I assume Peter would've too had he actually fallen and died.
@Andy-roid
9 ай бұрын
@@Violetsareblue092 Wow, Annie trying to save her son from something she knew nothing about never crossed my mind. Just pure intuition. I always wondered, if she wasn't unhinged, then what were all those episodes about. I'm glad to still be coming across new things about the movie.
@crouchingotter
9 ай бұрын
I think she might have tried it on her husband first which is why he starved himself to death. The moral of the story is don’t trust grandma, she’s probably a psycho cultist.
@StoneColdSteveAutism95
9 ай бұрын
Oak's reaction to Annie slamming her head on the attic door is too good 😂
@eclat4641
8 ай бұрын
😂
@kiedragerl8119
9 ай бұрын
Okay so this was hilarious to watch you guys. I know its hard to see some things at the end because its dark but you guys missed alot of the plot because it's so subtle. The grandmother was trying to summon Paimon from youth. She's the one who as the mom said "trying to put people into his body" (her uncle or brother or whatever). No one in her family was actually schizophrenic or sick, they were being haunted and seemed crazy because the grandma was trying to put Paimon in their bodies but they all killed themselves or went totally insane. From what we know the grandmother herself was never the vessel as Paimon prefers males. She went for Charlie because that was a temporary "housing" for him. She pressured the mom to have a son and even tried to take over him as a baby but the mom even says in therapy that she didnt allow it like she did with Charlie. The mom also says in the sleepwalking section that she never wanted him and tried to have a miscarriage. I'm sure Paimon had some hand in stopping it along with the grandmother. The spirit did get into Charlie (hence the "male" name - Paimon prefers male hosts per the book - the fact that the mom says "she had her hooks in her from the beginning", etc). You can even see in close ups of the picture of the baby bottle feeding of Charlie on the fridge had black herbs in it (just like the tea the mom was given by Joanie). Those herbs are mentioned as a way to make someone open to possession (if you study the occult you know this but it's not stated in the movie). Paimon in the book also had 3 heads attached to his camel and 3 women in the movie lost their heads. Naked people are actually all over the movie in the shadows throughout but it's so subtle you don't see it. That's how they got Charlie's toys and the sons picture, they were in the house alot. That's how the grandmoms body ended up in the attic. When Joanie says at the end "we corrected your original female body" that was Charlie, not the grandma. Also there is a theory that the reason Charlie was so sick and possibly had ticks and things was because she was incompatible with the demon inside her body as he preferred male hosts. Notice how she cut off the birds head and drew it with a crown? That was Paimon. The cult put the deer in the road and set up her death to continue to destroy the family literally and emotionally. Also Joanie chanting at the sons school that he needed to be "expelled" and to "get out", she was trying to spiritually force the son's spirit out of his body so that Paimon could enter. More than likely she wasn't literally physically there. Remember in the prior scene she had set up a ritual at her place with him as the focus. That's probably why the other kids didn't hear her. Which of course it eventually happened at the end when you see his spirit leave and the blue light (Paimon) came into his body. Also yes, I saw this opening night and have probably seen it over a dozen times now. It was insanity in the theater. First movie where I actually jumped a few times (that NEVER happens) and people were screaming left and right and a fair amount of people walked out through the movie. Finally, it's called Hereditary not only because of the original thought that the theme was inherited mental illness but what was actually the "hereditary" aspect was generational attempts at summoning a king of Hell into a male body. Wild shit.
@nicigiusto6124
9 ай бұрын
I've seen Hereditary a couple times and still didn't put some of these things together! Wonderful summary.
@kiedragerl8119
9 ай бұрын
@@nicigiusto6124 thanks!
@jaysuscrass9119
9 ай бұрын
thank you for doing your homework! I had quite a few gaps in the story I didn't know existed but this REALLY stitched the story together for me, what a wild horror movie script!
@kay-jay1581
9 ай бұрын
Yes this is an excellent explanation to the story it takes a few watches to catch everything own your own and even a couple of videos to help understand everything
@shaniquewright1951
9 ай бұрын
Woooow! Your explanation finally did it for me. I’ve watched reactions after seeing this in theatres and missed a lot of what you had explained.
@TomJones-wx5on
8 ай бұрын
Family therapist here. This is my favorite depiction of generational trauma committed to any screen (haunting of hill house number 2). What better way demonstrate the inescapable feeling of generational trauma than from a sacrificial lamb story from the perspective of the lambs. Movie should have won several Oscar’s
@bradleybarnett1469
9 ай бұрын
The symbolism of Toni Collette's character making miniatures/dolls and the cult using this family like they are playthings/miniatures is truly terrifying and interesting
@vtetrooo1312
9 ай бұрын
So true!
@bradleybarnett1469
9 ай бұрын
@RoarTheRapper I think that's the intention, or people just reading into it a lot
@pollyparrot9447
9 ай бұрын
The kids are studying a Greek tragedy at school which deals with the impossibility of escaping one's fate. Every element of the movie points to the fact that the family are puppets who cannot alter what is happening to them.
@vtetrooo1312
9 ай бұрын
@@pollyparrot9447 Wow getting more amazing with every detail I learn!
@Transitcat
9 ай бұрын
Annie was trying to detach and distance herself from her situation. Kind of like how Oak had to take a step back and clinically rate the movie because the emotional impact is too heavy.
@meghanmonroe
9 ай бұрын
It's so nice to see some Peter love for a change. Almost everyone forgets that there were two people in that traumatic event, but no one is checking on him or even asking him what happened or anything. After the accident with Charlie, it's almost like Peter becomes invisible except when Annie wants to vent her anger. He just gets used and abused for the rest of the movie. I feel so bad for him. Also, Charlie was old enough to be carrying her own epipen - especially to a barbecue. That's another thing mom deserved blame for. That family didn't have a chance.
@SantosAl
9 ай бұрын
I was honestly positively surprised when they noticed how overly antagonistic Annie is towards Peter all the time and how neglectful she is towards her daughter.
@byunbaekhyun4010
8 ай бұрын
Literally just had a fight with my sister over this. She was so shocked i was pointing out Annie's faults but they were BLARING. And as the parent??? She was just as responsible for charlie. You don't sic your what? 10-11 year old kid???? On your teenager who's going to a high school party AT NIGHT. It's stupid. And my sister was so offended. Sure, peter fucked up. But annie fucked up just as much and has the bigger responsibility of being Charlie AND PETER'S parent.
@sarads7877
8 ай бұрын
I think anne is pretty much the only person to “blame” from charlie’s death. You literally cannot expect your 17 year old son to look after his 12/13 year old sister while he’s at a party with his friends, OBVIOUSLY he’s not gonna pay enough attention. Besides, what are you even doing sending her to a party of adults/nearly adults? Even if your son doesn’t drink or smoke there is gonna be plenty of people that do, there is also gonna be plenty of foul language, kissing etc, what is a kid doing there? 💀 And again the fact that they would allow her to leave the house with no epi pen, that’s crazy
@bodo887
7 ай бұрын
I think you are disregarding the fact that Charlie was possessed by Paimon by that point already and that the grandmother was trying to get Paimon into the son. Of course the mother isn't acting rationally or like a normal empathetic mom would. Funnily enough, the movie hints at the most "loving" thing she does is her trying to kill her son before Paimon could possess him.
@meghanmonroe
7 ай бұрын
@@bodo887 That's a good point, although I would still argue that she wasn't officially possessed until after her husband went up in flames. There was definitely some extra stuff happening with her before that though, I do acknowledge lol I just really don't think her anger and disgust are part of an act. That's her and she means it.
@StacyLym
9 ай бұрын
The Oak’s reaction was worth watching alone. The spectrum of facial expressions & human emotions were gold! Love him!
@bamflyer
9 ай бұрын
The part where it was a static shot in the room where you guys were anticipating a jump scare there actually was a “cool jump scare”, the whole time in that wide shot if you look in the dark corner over the bed, you can see the mom in the dark, present. In the theatre, different people spotted it at different times, so people would scream individually and friends would panic because they don’t see it, it created a very terrifying sense of paranoia for that scene and a memorable theatre moment that I can’t forget.
@MamadNobari
9 ай бұрын
Lmao I bet people who didn't see it were like "damn, a lot of schizos attending movies tonight, huh?"
@beatlesnqueen
9 ай бұрын
Yep! I remember that happening when I saw it in the theater, too. Same thing with when the grandma shows up when the mom turns the light out. It took a second to see her, but when we did everyone just about shit their pants lol
@ohits_just_evelyn
9 ай бұрын
YES same thing happened in my theater. So cool sharing moment like that with a whole theater full of people. Really felt like we were in it together lmao
@omegashinra7672
9 ай бұрын
I just watched this for the first time tonight and when I noticed her I absolutely bricked it, it scared me so bad my eyes watered. Masterclass.
@sithlord_dani
9 ай бұрын
time stamp please
@ashtonturner2862
9 ай бұрын
Toni Collette should have at least been nominated for an Oscar for this role. She was my favorite performance of that year.
@islaythejabberwokky
Ай бұрын
The actor who played Peter did a phenomenal job. Every time he broke down that felt *real.* There's something so visceral about it, and it's *heartbreaking* to watch a grown teenage boy so scared and disturbed and traumatized that he regresses to such a small, vulnerable state, begging a school friend that he's smoking with to hold his hand, wailing "Mommy please" and sobbing so hard that he's drooling... Something about characters going from "Mom" to "Mommy" when they're that scared always gets me.
@UhOhHereWeGo
9 ай бұрын
Okay so there are multiple times in this movie where you guys missed silhouettes of people in the corners of dark rooms. This movie was meant to be watched in the dark. It’s horrifying
@lauravarnai9612
9 ай бұрын
I think every horror movie should be watched in the dark. I can't take seriously a horror movie reaction when reactionists (is it a word?) pretend to enjoy them while ten light sources are burning their eyes out in a room so light they probably barely see anything from the movie. Like I really like horror movies, but I don't think I could truly get scared by them during the day, or in a fully lit room. I don't care about how you look in the video with your perfect lighting, I want creators to give the best chance to the horror movie and watch it in the dark as they should.
@rubiosagardia
9 ай бұрын
Thank you, i was looking for this comment, i adore these guys, but sometimes they talk to much and don’t pay attention to details. 😂
@TheJerbol
9 ай бұрын
Yeah one reason being a reactor sucks is that they need to be in super-well lit rooms to look good on camera but I'm sure it absolutely butchers the viewing experience
@ragtimeraver
9 ай бұрын
@@TheJerbol Some reactors do it right. Ashleigh Burton often watches horror movies in the dark and records in night vision. I wish more reactors did the same.
@TheJerbol
9 ай бұрын
@@ragtimeraver she's great and those reactions are some of her best! I absolutely love her personality it's so fun to watch with
@teejaykaye
9 ай бұрын
Charlie’s death is one of the most horrifying scenes in any movie I’ve seen. The way the scene just lingers on Peter, his absolute shock and disbelief. The unwillingness to accept what’s happened. What he just did. And then the mom’s screams when she finds the body. I cannot comprehend what that would feel like.
@Scary__fun
7 ай бұрын
Yet these guys don't think it's a "horror" movie... which is ridiculous. I guess beheadings are a normal day occurrence to them. Some people equate jump scares with horror when in fact that's the laziest and easiest thing to have something jump out at the screen. The guy on the right seemed like this type as he was asking "when is something going to happen?" Sadly that's the typical casual movie viewer. The guy on left actually picked up on the unrelenting stress of impending doom which this movie expertly achieves.
@StacyLym
9 ай бұрын
I could not click on this reaction fast enough! Toni Collette not receiving an Oscar nomination (or win for that matter) for her performance was an absolute abomination!
@BaddMedicine
9 ай бұрын
Toni was phenomenal in this
@vtetrooo1312
9 ай бұрын
The Oscars never reward horror movies but it’s their lost honestly…
@StacyLym
9 ай бұрын
@@vtetrooo1312Truth!
@Pillowlips77
9 ай бұрын
Oooh..they gotta react to X and Pearl after this 🔥
@braindedpxl
9 ай бұрын
1000%. Toni is sooooo f’n good
@fVicen8
9 ай бұрын
1. The bird crashing the window symbolizes the car crashing. Charlie cutting off the bird's head is a premonition of her own demise. Early in the film, Charlie draws a picture of her grandmother with her head cut off. This is a clear foreshadowing of the decapitation theme that becomes significant later in the story. 2. Annie trying to kill her son unconsciously is an act of love. Her subconscious mind is aware of what is happening and it doesn't want her son to be part of the cult ritual.
@h.haydon8044
9 ай бұрын
I love how the scene where Toni Collette goes to the support group, she describes how the men in her family suffered severe mental illness, but by the end of the film, you realize it wasn't mental illness
@jeepersmcgee3466
9 ай бұрын
oh for sure, the things they experienced would get them written off as insane, especially in the 60s-90s
@jagp135
8 ай бұрын
She also claims her mother had multiple personality disorder, which was most likely her being possessed by different spirits like Annie was during the séance.
@indiajohnson4149
9 ай бұрын
I was really worried Oak was going to write this off because of how uncomfortable it is but to see him appreciate the story and the characters and the details and how masterfully well done this movie is was sooo refreshing! I'm so glad you guys could appreciate this movie! Its one of my favorite films.
@dailycarolina.
9 ай бұрын
Hereditary is one of the best films I've ever watched but will forever haunt me. The headless kid and the possession at the end truly terrified me. I barely slept for days.
@desireeslaten6618
9 ай бұрын
The biggest thing that I missed the first time watching was that in the grandmother's Invocations book Paimon is pictured carrying 3 severed heads...and the cult took the heads Ellen, Annie and Charlie for the summoning. The entire family was always doomed to be sacrificed for decades. One of the best horror movies I've ever seen. Your guy's reactions were GOLD!
@mentallyunw3ll
9 ай бұрын
Did I change my plans to make sure I had time to watch this right now? Absolutely I did 😂 been waiting for this one!
@BaddMedicine
9 ай бұрын
Hope you enjoy 🤜🤛
@vtetrooo1312
9 ай бұрын
Ahahha me too 😂
@marjoleinewelters1728
9 ай бұрын
"didn't expect mom on the ceiling sawing her head off" What a line to say 😂😂 Followed shortly by this next beauty "why are there a bunch of naked old people in the attic?" Lol you guys have the best reactions man 😂😘
@House0fHoot
9 ай бұрын
I literally laughed out loud when he said that!
@Rosyln
9 ай бұрын
Seriously one of the best horror movies Ive seen! Toni is incredible and the sound design and editing are masterful in this! I was so paranoid i was gonna hear that click sound out of nowhere and have a total freakout after watching this movie 😂
@rynefox7366
9 ай бұрын
23:33 “Is this where the movie really kicks off?” Why no, sir. In fact, I was there just a few minutes ago when the gentlemen on your right and left were covering their faces and you sat there with your mouth gaping open. This movie officially “kicks off” with the peanut allergy.
@swampratguttergoblin
9 ай бұрын
Ngl i love when yall react to horror movies bc seeing 3 buff grown men be just as terrified as i was is so comforting
@jeepersmcgee3466
9 ай бұрын
the "corrected your form to a male one" thing indicated that Charlie was the host until that point. Annie didn't let Grandma close to Peter, but Grandma had full access to Charlie and used it to get Paimon in her, where he was mostly dormant (except when beheading birds)
@sarads7877
8 ай бұрын
I think the tongue clicking was paimon coming through in charlie’s body
@annanas8162
3 ай бұрын
@@sarads7877 I've heard people compare the Clicking to a Cluck from a bird or Chicken. Because Paymon is often depicted as in bird form (I heard from another channel) so the clicking and beheading birds with crowns fit that.
@itsDelfi
2 ай бұрын
@@annanas8162 Now that you say it, Charlie's face looks kinda bird-ish
@razrv3lc
21 күн бұрын
@@sarads7877Paimon is depicted riding a camel. The tongue click is a camel command people in the Middle East have used forever. The tongue click was something Paimon would have done to control his camel.
@dem0litionsss
9 ай бұрын
one of my favourite aspects of this movie is that charlie was NEVER…. charlie. from the day she was born she was paimon, which is why the grandma was so “close” the charlie and acted like she was her daughter. because she wasnt charlie, she was paimon the entire time- which is then why paimon in peters body at the end answers to “charlie”
@uggggggghhhhh
9 ай бұрын
King Paimon has a nut allergy lmao
@gandhialwaysleavesanonion679
9 ай бұрын
@@uggggggghhhhh His vessel/female host did have an allergy yes haha
@jimmy2k4o
6 ай бұрын
I don’t think she was always paimon, I think the possession took hold early in her life when her grandmother took charge of her care. But because paimon was in a girls body which he didn’t like, he was confused and acted neurodivergent.
@kurtarguelles5276
9 ай бұрын
This movie was a genius watching in theater. I remember someone said back then that the "grandma jumpscare scene" was only visible on the upper/middle seats, and the people on the lower seats were wondering why are they screaming. 😂
@kwooooo
9 ай бұрын
This is actually my favorite horror movie. The slow-moving dread isn’t for everybody but I loved how Hereditary didn’t rely on cheap jump scares to be scary. Instead it is lovingly detailed in how utterly disturbing and upsetting it is. I love it as an art piece but my big Marine nephew tapped out after Charlie got her block knocked. Seeing things like that happen to kids is a lot of people’s final straw. The fact that Toni Collette wasn’t recognized with an award for her role is an insult to cinema-having seen for myself my mother react to learning my sister had died, Toni’s performance as a grieving mother was incredibly accurate and heart wrenching. Her monologue alone at the dinner table was award-worthy but her complete performance was something to behold. The fact that horror movies like this one are now and have been historically excluded just goes to show that film award committees are full of crap. They don’t care about film as an art, just whatever film can cram the most A-listers into the cast.
@jenloveshorror
9 ай бұрын
YES to literally everything you said. I don't even watch award shows anymore cause they just cont to ignore so many amazing performances that I found instead of joy watching them just outright disgust of their snobbery & ignorance for lack of a better word. Until the day they actually add horror & sci-fi to the list, they do the cinema world a gross injustice. It's like they think only drama & comedy are the only genres of film that matter. Who even picked those 2 categories & held them up at this high standard. Yuck, just my opinion 😊❤
@kiedragerl8119
9 ай бұрын
100% accurate. Toni Collette was AMAZING! This is one of the best horror pieces of art that's both respectful of the material and it had shocking parts for sure but it wasn't a movie meant to just rely on shocks. It deserves all the awards.
@katwebbxo
9 ай бұрын
I completely agree 💕
@RonLarhz
9 ай бұрын
lmao what. this is exactly cheap scare tactics. the clicking, the wall/bg lurkers, the isolation jump scares....🙄🙄🙄
@kwooooo
9 ай бұрын
@@RonLarhz There's literally only one jump scare in the movie and it's when Annie runs at Peter after she'd been on the ceiling. A loud noise accompanied by a disturbing visual is what a jump scare is. The clicking is never accompanied by a visual. The clicking is literally part of the story used to establish a paranormal presence WITHOUT over-the-top visuals being necessary. As for the spooky visuals like Annie on the wall or her mother standing in the dark, which are not accompanied by noise or jump scares, what... do you think a horror movie is? Should spooky things not happen in a horror movie?
@michaelkb8783
9 ай бұрын
Love The Oak's self-awareness and adjusting to the film as the writers intend. Too many reactors start getting a big head about what they want versus what artists are giving and end up thinking they, the reactor, know better than writers.
@Whoevernewthat
9 ай бұрын
Yes!! I was thinking about this watching another chanel. I feel reactions should be like this, 1 or more people just watching a movie. Watching and reacting, not analyze from the very beginning and criticize just to criticize 😂
@chelscara
9 ай бұрын
AAAAHHHHHHHHH so excited! If you ever want more info, a KZitemr named Novum made a 4+ hour video explaining all the cult stuff and it’s absolutely insane how much Ari Aster put into this film!
@__LB_
9 ай бұрын
Highly recommend that video. It’s sooooo good!
@funty420
9 ай бұрын
LOVE THAT VIDEO SO MUCH
@itss_nattyj
9 ай бұрын
Agreed! I didn’t like Hereditary the first time I saw it because I thought it was too slow and pretentious (I didn’t get it). However, after watching Novum’s video, I’ve been able to rewatch the film several times with “new eyes” and appreciate the brilliance of Ari’s work and the cast’s performances. I now love Hereditary and get excited anytime I see someone reacting to it.
@purpleprinc3
8 ай бұрын
Thank you ever so much for recommending that! I watched another one but it was only a 40 minute video...4+ hours? Praise Paimen!!
@jamalieh
9 ай бұрын
I saw this in an empty theater at night and the pure shock and loss of logical thinking of the brother after THAT scene was the hardest part to watch. The brothers traumatic disassociation followed by the moms screams and cries the next morning were more disturbing to me than any of the creepy stuff following and I remember going from yelling out "oh no oh no oh no" to bawling my eyes out because the different emotional responses are so visceral and acted in such earnest ways. The dad trying to be the emotional anchor to try and make space for the brother and mom's various coping mechanisms was so hard to watch! making it through this movie is definitely a full body experience !
@ChiefxASTx
6 ай бұрын
charlies death was def memorable and then ari aster follows it up with one of the most horrifying movie openings with Dani's sisters murder suicide in midsommar lol ari is a masterclass in horror
@my_randomology
9 ай бұрын
That dinner scene? Toni Collette deserved a freakin' Academy Award. I was so engrossed that *I* felt guilty about things I hadn't even done! Not that it was ever in question that she could act, which she obviously can, but this performance was utterly devastating on so many levels.
@DeRockMedia
9 ай бұрын
gave me ptsd of my mom yelling at me growing up...she sometimes was drunk and overly harsh
@cristianaragon292
8 ай бұрын
@@DeRockMediasorry you had to go through that mate
@annanas8162
3 ай бұрын
@@DeRockMedia ❤
@DeRockMedia
3 ай бұрын
@cristianaragon292 it's alright, angry women just frighten me, I don't give af if a guy does though lol
@ec9121
9 ай бұрын
I am still pissed off that Toni didn't win all of the frickin awards for this ironically beautiful performance 🤬
@leogothisoscar271
9 ай бұрын
Actually Paimon was in Charlie, not the grandmother. That is why she was so obsessed with her and at the end Joan called Peter Charlie first before referring to him as Paimon. This is also why the weird guy at the funeral was smiling at her, he was in the Paimon cult as well (he was also the naked dude in the house towards the climax that I believe you missed) and why that lady that you thought was the grandmother was waving at Charlie....she was also one of the naked ones in the attic that Peter saw.
@Rohan_--
9 ай бұрын
Love Oak's reaction to the head banging, its simple but so good at being creepy and unnatural
@ilovemyfriends32
9 ай бұрын
So I haven’t seen anyone clarify it yet so I’ll just put it here in case, but Paimon was never possessing the grandmother, she put Paimon into Charlie as a baby, that’s why she never let Annie take care of Charlie, she was making sure that Charlie was being properly groomed for Paimon, except the fact she was a female. That’s why at the end they say they corrected Paimon’s first female body, by killing Charlie (if you go back and look, you’ll see the necklace symbol on the phone pole) they set Paimon free to take over Peter via their rituals, which is why his photo showed up in Joanie’s place and the attic
@lanowyn
7 ай бұрын
Paimon was literally in the grandmother. It wasn't until after the grandmother was dug up that Paimon inhabited Charlie, right before she went to the party and died
@Nexils
9 ай бұрын
A horrible detail is how Peter was high as a kite on weed during the accident. Time slows down like crazy, so for us it was a horrific two minutes or so of him recollecting his thoughts. But to him it must've felt like a torturous amount of seemingly endless realization of what just happened.
@eveschwarz467
9 ай бұрын
I really like that movie, it is so special in its genre. At the beginning, you see many members of the cult at the funeral, like the guy in the corner creepily smiling, so many hints like the mother who was talking about her brother, who said that Granny was trying to put other people inside him.... he was the first victim. And Charlie was never just a girl, just the demon from the very beginning who was waiting for a male body.
@Bringmethehorizondude
9 ай бұрын
For what it’s worth Oak, I really enjoyed your reaction here. All three of y’all were enveloped with the story and it was awesome to watch
@aliciaa4859
9 ай бұрын
Toni Collete did that “I am your mother” scene with no rehearsal beforehand and i think that’s so amazing
@chelscara
9 ай бұрын
16:14 poor Oak, this is not the movie for you if this isn’t your type of movie. I hope you watched plenty of chill things after, preferably drinking cocoa or something.
@JoseTorres-kl6fy
9 ай бұрын
One of my favorite details is Steve catching on fire instead of Annie like she thought would happen. Gets at the theme articulated in one of Peter's classes about characters not having a choice. Annie tries to make a choice to save her family, but she doesn't actually have the power to make that choice. All the events have been preorchestrated, and she doesn't have any control over any of it. Paimon shows her that cruel truth and it finally breaks her enough to be possessed.
@jenloveshorror
9 ай бұрын
YES!!! LET'S GOOOOOOOOO!!!!❤❤❤ Toni Collette is a master class of acting in this movie!!! Theres only a handful of ppl that can be in that group & shes at the top!!❤
@kryten09
9 ай бұрын
I remember the "telephone pole" scene happening in the theater. Kt was so unexpected that multiple people dropped their popcorn/food. The popcorn even fell out of my mouth. One of my favorite horror films made in my lifetime. Even if it didnt have the horror element, it would be a freat family drama. Toni Collette got robbed of an Oscar nomination!
@abcdefghij1234567327
9 ай бұрын
Best horror movie since Sinister! Didn't rely on jumpscares like 90 percent of horror movies made today. Thanks for the epic reactions guys!
@houstonmullins7171
9 ай бұрын
Also you guys should definitely watch Sinister btw
@Kodisage
9 ай бұрын
Yessss LOVE sinister too. A horror with Ethan hawke and Toni would be incredible
@hafor2846
9 ай бұрын
Horror movies are the best they have ever been. I know, complaining how horror movies are all jump scares is popular, but there rarely is any evidence backing it up at least since 2010.
@SedriqMiers
9 ай бұрын
best dog pile for psyop'd sheeple.
@shaniblack9697
9 ай бұрын
Sinister scared the ever-loving shit out of me hahaha
@Transitcat
9 ай бұрын
The Family Grief hooked me. All of the raw reactions to Charlie’s death are gut wrenching to watch. Toni Collette’s wailing on the bedroom floor is palpable. And Alex Wolfs fugue after the accident is so relatable. And Gabrielle Burn trying to be the tent post by holding it all together with cobwebs. Brilliant performances. Brilliant directorial choices. Also, Creepy AF!!!
@Chloe.reynolds96
9 ай бұрын
I feel slightly disappointed that at no point in this movie, does anyone ask; Annie, are you okay? Are you okay Annie?
@kiedragerl8119
9 ай бұрын
wow....just....*slow clap*
@johnyd1911
9 ай бұрын
😂
@DeRockMedia
9 ай бұрын
she was struck by a smooth criminal
@sedi2066
9 ай бұрын
Annie are you ok? Will you tell us are you ok? Theres a sign in the window, that he struck you a crescendo, ANNIE!
@Respect2theFallen
9 ай бұрын
I laughed too hard at this while brushing my teeth. Damn I wish they snuck that joke in there. I think I thought of it once or twice while watching the movie before the Charlie incident but that shit disarmed my humor until she was on the artic door banging her head then I laughed again.
@WoahLookAtThatFreak
9 ай бұрын
Oak: "I wouldn't really call this a horror movie" Also Oak: 43:09 😂
@chelscara
9 ай бұрын
I love that every time Oak tries to give himself an out… it _almost_ happens 😆😆
@CalypsoKitty420
9 ай бұрын
Just dropping in to say I love having Diamond Dave in reactions! Always appreciate his insight to the filmography and acting
@BaddMedicine
9 ай бұрын
🤜🤛
@sarinugh
9 ай бұрын
I had the exact same reaction as Oak when Annie was banging her head on the ceiling. Full body chills in terror! My best friend showed me this movie when I was depressed after I left an abusive relationship and I gotta say - this movie definitely took my mind off of it 😅
@vtetrooo1312
9 ай бұрын
Damn!!!! Your friend is ruthless 😂
@sarinugh
9 ай бұрын
@@vtetrooo1312that’s why she’s a bestie! 😂
@johnpapadopoulos4881
9 ай бұрын
Me too dude holy fuck. Very rarely i get scared by horror movies but i was creeped to my core in this scene...
@thebookgeek87
9 ай бұрын
Y'all definitely missed the grandmother standing in that dark corner in the beginning when Annie was looking through that box. There are also lots of things hidden in this movie, some of which I still haven't caught even after multiple viewings
@ago5022
9 ай бұрын
“when Vin Diesel jumps off his charger and lands on another car” 😂😂😂 Oak is everything. i felt everything you felt, my guy. this one is rough.
@thisisnotausernameXD
9 ай бұрын
I actually had to sleep with the lights on after I watched this movie in the theater. I remember there was audible gasps from the audience during the same scenes that you guys had such visceral reactions to.
@breakwoodhopper6739
9 ай бұрын
I like the little details you pick up in the movie if you watch it again like the story about her brother saying their mom tried to put people inside him I completely missed lil stuff like that on the first watch
@ohshiitake
9 ай бұрын
i hate when people say this movie isn't horror as if it's not horrifying
@JaimeCard
9 ай бұрын
I saw this movie in theaters, and the silence that spread over everyone after the pole scene was wild. Figured Oak would have a rough time with this one.
@johnyd1911
9 ай бұрын
Exactly... Everyone was looking at each other with mouths open and then gasped when they showed her head. Happened again with the mom banging her head on the attic door...
@toad6461
9 ай бұрын
I am so jealous, I had a trusted horror buddy tell me the movie was crap and not to bother, I finally got around to seeing it and was so pissed I missed out on seeing it in the theater. I no longer give a shit what people say and I go see what I want lol
@beatlesnqueen
9 ай бұрын
@@toad6461Same, if I wanna see something, I’m gonna see it regardless of what I hear.
@Respect2theFallen
9 ай бұрын
@johnyd1911 idk why but the mom banging her head made me laugh
@Hey_Jamie
9 ай бұрын
39:49 and 39:58 dammit I was dying for Oak to spot mom floating in the top left hand corner of his room here!
@terricooper3678
9 ай бұрын
I'm with Oak on this one. I was so queasy watching this film. Great performance by Toni Collette! I'm glad I watched it but never again...except to see your reactions...LOL!
@lw5110
9 ай бұрын
I agree, I never want to watch this again. Great performances and everything but once was enough.
@viking1430
9 ай бұрын
@@lw5110 me with Midsommar. The entire Christian scene felt rape-ish to me, I never wanna watch that movie ever again.
@JulietteReacts
9 ай бұрын
40:52 - did this come out in theatres? YES! And I, despite not being particularly into horror films, decided to go see this on my BIRTHDAY. To be honest, it was probably a good move because I never wouldn’t gotten through it if I’d been at home/had access to a remote control. It was SUCH a stressful watch but amazing. Don’t think I’ve ever experienced a more shocking moment, at the cinema, than the decapitation. I remember my sister and I looking at each other after it ended and sharing a “fuck, that was great moment”… only to hear several other audience members say “that was wank/shit etc”. I guess they didn’t expect it to be on the artier end of the spectrum and were expecting something else - but I loved it.
@andrewmcmurray9580
9 ай бұрын
I saw this one in theaters, and the majority of the theater sat there in stunned silence for about five minutes afterwards. I've shown it to friends and each successive rewatch, I got more and more out of it. I love this movie.
@beatlesnqueen
9 ай бұрын
This is easily one of my favorite movies to watch people react to
@marshmallsy
9 ай бұрын
Hereditary is absolutely brilliant. Even before the more overt horror starts to happen, the grief and agony portrayed by Toni Collette's character instills such a feeling of dread that carries the tension throughout the whole movie. Her screams when she discovers Charlie's body made me more viscerally upset and uncomfortable in a way a lot of explicitly scary/gorey/shock horror movies haven't come CLOSE to doing.
@Subjectivity13
9 ай бұрын
43:09 That is, by far, the most freaked out I have ever seen the Oak. It's so perfect that he wore a Shrek shirt for this. The contrast makes it so much better. He's normally so stoic that seeing him lose it is so much more powerful than when one of the other guys is disturbed. That's really how this movie does it, though. It's not the kind of horror that uses jumpscares. It's about slowly building up a creepy atmosphere to unsettle you, so that by the time something really happens, you're already at your breaking point. It's a rough experience.
@Saphthings
9 ай бұрын
Fun fact, the *clicking* sound they'd make is how you'd pronounce the demons name in our tongue, and the movie serves as a channel by watching, so that if you'd been doing it out of curiosity, the sound, you've been sort of summoning the demon to you :D. The movie is really well researched about demonology and ancient rituals.
@vtetrooo1312
9 ай бұрын
Are you serious!?!?!? 😮 Ok that’s freaking terrifying and amazing at the same time lol
@jenloveshorror
9 ай бұрын
Wow!!! I hadn't heard about that. Thanks for the info & also lil bit terrifying 😮
@BlueRoseWolfie
9 ай бұрын
Fun, so I have been summoning this demon since I was a child. Been tongue clicking since I was tiny
@lunacouer
9 ай бұрын
That is absolutely not true 😂 I mean, unless you wanna tell the class that all the people on the African continent that speak with click consonants are actually demon-summoners. You really wanna go there? Spread that kind of 1800's racism, that they're all demon-worshipers?
@Haru_Misu
9 ай бұрын
I dont think you know what fact means😭💀💀
@sissyc6754
9 ай бұрын
The classroom scene when the teacher asks about the Greek mythology story if it is more tragic if you have a choice or it's fate (no choice) is a key point. The dollhouse characters had no choice where they were placed is a central motif throughout the movie.. And of course the name of the move "Hereditary" means you had no choice of the inflictions you inherit. and have to endure.
@marig9236
9 ай бұрын
This
@erikanorman928
9 ай бұрын
Nobody ever talks about this aspect!
@danielflynn9141
9 ай бұрын
Toni Collette should have been recognized for this performance, especially with an Oscar nod. Unfortunately the Academy, historically, has a rather dim view on the horror genre. I think this is unfortunate and non-sensical. Just contemplate what this lady is able to do with her face, alone. She has one of the most expressive faces in the business. I have never seen such expressions of rage or terror in my entire life on the face of another human being. Her face might as well be made from clay, because she can contort it into the most unusual and extreme expressions. The things she can do with her voice are equally as impressive. The scream upon discovering her child's body was primal. Her performance was disturbing and painful, and perhaps it was too extreme for some folks, but I think they are missing the point. It's disturbing, but it's effective! Regardless, I think this performance is a certifiable banger and will be regarded as iconic for the genre for many years to come.
@jenloveshorror
9 ай бұрын
YES!!!!❤❤ Very well said, my friend!!!😊
@victoria2425
9 ай бұрын
oak’s reaction was awesome! also i would rate it a 4 - 4.5 the FIRST time i watched it, however the SECOND time watching, it’s an easy 5. once you understand on some level what is happening, it is mortifying tbh. the first time i watched it was with my dad and the scene where charlie’s head is knocked off we BOTH screamed and i almost threw myself off the couch! my dad’s like a 6’4 veteran and former boxer too, so him being freaked out like that means somethin lmaoo
@victoria2425
9 ай бұрын
also some of the scariest scene imo are the ones with peter. particularly the scene where his is possessed by paimon in class and slams his own face on his desk. the other one that seriously fucks me up (and does even more so every time i watch it) is the part where peter is at school, and across the street he sees johanne and she is trying to EXPEL him from his OWN body… ugh it seriously gives me chills to even think about it
@FeelinErie
9 ай бұрын
I saw this at the cinema, and the amount of times I almost shat myself... Also, I've just noticed - Hereditary: a king is crowned, and Midsommar: a queen is crowned. I have to wonder what's next!
@aspireproductions266
9 ай бұрын
Beau Is Afraid: A...I don't even know.
@MamadNobari
9 ай бұрын
Beau Is Afraid: a giant penis king is crowned.
@Heretic_Jones
3 ай бұрын
There's so many little pieces forshadowing through the whole movie, it makes a second watch so fascinating. My favorite is regarding Annie's (the mom) brother and father. When she's sharing at the group, she mentions her father dying before she was born, and her brother killing himself due to "psychotic hallucinations", and blaming their mother (the grandmother) for "putting people inside of [him]". If you noticed in the text describing Paimon found in the movie, you'll note he prefers male host bodies. So it's very blatantly implied that this cult the grandmother belonged to has been trying to summon Paimon for a while, and already tried with Annie's father and brother. This movie is horrifying, but I love rewatching films and seeing the little details put in.
@Hyriudragon
9 ай бұрын
This film is absolutely AMAZING. Every time you watch, you notice something new. For example, the moment when she drop ink on the desk and sees the telephone number, well... She didnt touch the ink.
@herdheaven
9 ай бұрын
Oak's reactions had my dying throughout the whole movie especially the head banging scene lol
@charlottemorrow8873
9 ай бұрын
My husband and I saw this in the theater and had no clue what it was about or what the premise was. They barely did any promo on it, so when the car scene happened, everyone was so shocked😭 you could hear the gasps and everything, it was probably the best theater experience ever!!!
@Krazy_Kookum
9 ай бұрын
Not sure if you guys figured this out but the "Uncle" wasn't schizophrenic - he was driven mad by their mother and their mother's friends.
@agsmith43
9 ай бұрын
Okay, I have to start saying this. First love you guys but this is for almost all reactors. A24 does NOT make these films. They do not control shots, script, actors or nothing. Sometimes when they actually produce a film, they have some contribution, but a lot of the films they acquire they are just the distributers of. They put there name on it and finance the distribution and advertisement pf the films they want to back. I'm just so tired of people giving A24 so much credit for these movies when they have little to no involvement in the actual moving direction and vision. Now A24 is a great company that has a fine eye for amazing films, and have found a great niche. They help so many new and upcoming directors by backing them and funding either the production or distribution. Seeing the A24 name definitely deserves recognition for a movie because they back WINNERS AND AMAZING films. I just wish the directors and crew got more recognition with reactions who react to A24 like they are the ones making these movies. Such as Ari Aster is the director to this film and a lot of people mention A24 over and over again, when it is Asters film.
@yunochiii
9 ай бұрын
You guys, I saw Hereditary in theaters the night it came out. I cannot tell you in words just how hard I had to hold in my laughter when I saw Spidey Collette I CANNOT 😭😭😭
@lw5110
9 ай бұрын
This is one of the movies that still haunts my subconscious.
@0725038
9 ай бұрын
This movie needs a second viewing. There's so much hidden stuffs. It's one of the best crafted movie. You guys missed about 40% of what's going on and it's normal. Almost every scene and dialogue has some metaphor and double senses in it, you can't catch them all.
@emjai2122
9 ай бұрын
Oak’s reaction was a perfect early Christmas gift 🎁 😂
@aleksisuuronen5969
8 ай бұрын
The mother just doesn't even think about that Charlie didn't want to go at the party and her pushing her to (which is fine since it's not her fault either) and doesn't have quilt about it because she sees Peter as she says at the table sneering all the time.. she keeps saying she was killed or it not being an accident. Just like when Peter watches at the school in the glass and sees his reflection sneering back, she sees him looking at her just like that. That's because the Paimon isn't really Entered Peter yet, but is around distorting views and starting to take actions towards Peter's body. The head slamming, him starting to have the couch etc. Like Paimon is around him. She also get's even more effected for the tea herbs (for the lady being in the cult) and starts to do the miniature of the accident etc. so there is kinda differend realities going on for the characters. For the tricking and distorting things so they would fall apart. She is like certain that Peter somehow did it on purpose, the fact he in shock just drove home with the headless corpse propably starting the suspicion and then the distortions like the mother seeing him smiling making it a set thing for her that he did something on purpose. The father is kinda middle what I suppose, he doesn't say about him not sneering but it's hard to say what's going on with him for trying to stay composed by Not acting. What I also found interesting was that the father was so middle of it that he couldn't really 100% take Peter's side kinda propably thinking it will calm down as she grieves the worst part out. She isn't as spitefull towards Peter, while he is also solving his own feelings. Already being on edge by never having even let go the paint-thinner thing of sleep-walking (where she was propably subconciously trying to stop the bloodline from her mothers plans). He still like tries to keep it as normal as can but propably feels he cannot compeltely go console Peter for Annie being so adament him having done something, propably himself being effected to be blocked by getting somekinda control, handle on even something. Then very metaphorically when he ultimatelly does let it all out he burns, like he has been burning from inside the whole time but needs to stay stoic. Like literally burns up from trying to manage the situation. (Then also if he drinks to the sorrow it's one thing why not being able to intervine or be for everyone and it also going into the burning up since alcohol is flammable and On Top he had held over the paint-thinner and matches thing and then Himself burns 😅 Like there is a lot of details for everything).
@daerae9703
9 ай бұрын
as someone who would get sleep hallucinations seeing the ants scene was so real. I either see ants, spiders, or gnats, and ill nearly suffocate myself under my blankets trying to make sure they don't get into my mouth. It's like a weird thing between sleepwalking and sleep paralysis. I'm glad they showed this so I could show others what it looks like for me.
@jenloveshorror
9 ай бұрын
My mom suffers from that too. So scary. I always felt so bad for her cause in her mind it would be so real. I wonder how common that is cause we always thought it had something to do w her meds, like maybe a side effect when they were adjusting diff types of psych meds. But she's older now & no med changes & she will still get them. She will call me since I don't live w her now & be so freaked out. Il still go over & check the bed & the room just to be on the safe side & it eases her mind. I'm glad u shared cause I feel like I need to make sure she tells her Dr. Maybe there's some sort of therapy for it cause she gets very scared w some of them & it will take me hours to get her eased down. Thx❤
@Respect2theFallen
9 ай бұрын
Is there a name for that or what?
@daerae9703
9 ай бұрын
@@Respect2theFallen Hypnagogic and hypnopompic hallucinations although a sleep study confirms the diagnosis and can help you find out if it's linked to narcolepsy or mood disorders. Could also be linked to Parkinson's but that's only if you are older.
@jenloveshorror
9 ай бұрын
@Respect2theFallen I'm sure there's a much more accurate medical diagnosis, but when my mother gets asked by her Dr he often just asks her how has your sleep hallucinations. How many can she recall & what all can she recall, etc.. All I know is she will call me screaming sometimes at 4am cause it's so real for her & either myself or one of my older kids will run and check on her cause we never wanna just dismiss her. And the scary part is once we've calmed her, she realizes none of it was real but that fear that gripped her was real enough for all of us. The human psyche is so profound.
@sundulaatti
9 ай бұрын
Same here!!! As creepy as it was it was also cool to see something resemble what I experience in my hallucinations so well, so i could show my family what its like! Even the way the mom was flying around felt familiar from my hallucinations, i see things flying around the room that arent supposed to be able to fly like that
@TomJones-wx5on
8 ай бұрын
This movie also makes more sense when you realize the demon Paimon is one of mischief. It messes with people pretending like it’s Charlie then smirking Peter and pretending like the fire would catch mom on fire then changing it to dad. It’s playing with them from the moment it’s summoned.
@Healitall
9 ай бұрын
If all movies should just be rated on how well they leave a “good” feeling behind they would become pretty monotone. But like any great piece of art it makes you feel something you never felt before and you will still think about it later and it leaves you transformed … that is some pretty amazing piece of art. That is the purpose of art some might say.
@jenloveshorror
9 ай бұрын
I love that!! Very well said❤
@chvisk
23 күн бұрын
The silence after the car accident lol. Imagine a theater full of people having the same reaction. Complete silence/shock. Great shit.
@DresdanPI
9 ай бұрын
This is one movie which has stuck in my mind more than any other. The acting by Toni Collette is astounding and the story is so creepy and engaging, and that's what sets it apart.
@HolyPhlebotinum
8 ай бұрын
Remember how Annie refers to Peter "sneering" at her with that "fucking face on his face"? And he has no idea what she's talking about? When Peter looks at his reflection at school, he sees himself sneering back. I think that's what everyone else (or at least Annie) sees.
@jakob814
9 ай бұрын
I saw this movie in theatre front row, and trust me when I say that this was one of the most terrifying movie experiences I have been through, literally glued to my seat for the whole two hours. The car scene was a whole experience itself, you could almost feel the air get sucked out of the room it was intense AF. Amazing reaction and keep it up!
@erikanorman928
9 ай бұрын
I watched this alone in my bedroom and I was in absolute stunned silence. My husband came to check on me cause I gasped so loud and I couldn’t even speak to him for like 5 minutes.
@payersystempro
9 ай бұрын
On my first watch, I definitely got the gist of the story, but was scratching my head on a few things at the end. Everything fell into place on seeing it again, and it was the most satisfying 2nd watch of any movie I've ever experienced. Rather than questioning the mother, you see the family's slow walk into H-E-Doublehockeystyx. Peter's female classmate sums it up for us at the very beginning.
@vivacious_me
9 ай бұрын
YAAAAASSSS been waiting on this one. As a Toni fan, i thought her performance was STELLAR!!! Ari Aster definitely put himself on the map with this one ❤
@brucenatelee
9 ай бұрын
This is one of the most clever, intelligently lore-heavy horror films I've seen in a while. Nothing feels like supernatural-being-with-random-powers or jumpscares for no reason. There's a lot of mystery behind how everything works. The who, the why, it's all there.
@brucenatelee
9 ай бұрын
Charlie was possessed the whole time. Decapitating things, the click that transfers to Peter, they are signs of Paimon, the demon that possessed them. The cult set everything up, including the light pole and the nuts in the cake. Even some of the students are part of it.
@Mesiawhy
9 ай бұрын
“This kid needs to smoke some more weed” had me dyingggg 😂
@livingcoffee_edits
9 ай бұрын
The Demon was in Charlie when she was born and that is why the grandma cared so much about her. The demon could only move body if the person lost their head so that is why there are so many beheadings in this
@Mesiawhy
9 ай бұрын
This was definitely an experience in theatres. Everyone was pretty traumatized and when the credits rolled it was like a stunned silence 😂 made me queasy too
@katey631
9 ай бұрын
@40:49 -- so fun fact, i saw this movie for it's world premiere at the Sundance Film Festival in 2018. absolutely had no idea what i was getting into. obviously new it was a horror film but was not prepared for the terrifying journey this was going to be. i was shaking in my seat all night hahaha. this film fucked me up for like 6 months after. but it was one of my favorite theater going experiences in my life. the audience was electric and added to the atmosphere of the film. at some point in the movie, someone in the back of the theater dropped something on the ground and the whole theater gasped lolllllllll. this movie had everyone on edge in the theater. at some point i couldnt look at the screen anymore so i turned my head and made eye contact with this girl sitting two seats from me who was also not looking and we were both like "what the fuck" to each other. loll it was great. then there was a Q and A with the director and the girl who played Charlie hahaha. the first question that got asked was "Ari, are you okay?" lolllll. it was a great therapy session at 2:30 in the morning that night.
@skyofthelivingdead
9 ай бұрын
My dad and I saw this in the theater back in 2018, totally blind. THAT scene made the whole theater go silent, I’d never seen a simultaneous shocked reaction like that before.
@Vessel22222
9 ай бұрын
“What if he gets pulled over” yeah we could only hope that’s what happened.
@joshuacoldwater
9 ай бұрын
Oh no. I am just sitting down, and I don’t think Oak should be watching this. Your heart mate, it’s not worth it.
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