Movielogr

Lake Mungo (2009)

Directed by Joel Anderson

Horror

Most recently watched by sensoria, lolareels, danielt, seanCduregger, jakeneff, sleestakk, BTSjunkie

Overview

After 16-year-old Alice Palmer drowns at a local dam, her family experiences a series of strange, inexplicable events centered in and around their home. Unsettled, the Palmers seek the help of a psychic and parapsychologist, who discovers that Alice led a secret, double life. At Lake Mungo, Alice’s secret past emerges.

Rated R | Length 87 minutes

Actors

Rosie Traynor | David Pledger | Martin Sharpe | Talia Zucker | Tania Lentini | Cameron Strachan | Judith Roberts | Robin Cuming | Marcus Costello | Chloe Armstrong | Carole Patullo | John Dunn | Laurie Dunn | Kirsty McDonald | James Lawson | Phillip Boltin | Glenn Luck | Simon Wilton | Charles Armytage | Helen Bath | Steve Jodrell | Tammy McCarthy | Natasha Herbert | Michael Ormond Robinson | Tamara Donnellan | Scott Terrill | Stephanie Capiron | Courtney Te'ray | Kimberley Bumpstead | Jason Ball | Barney Wursthorn | Scott Dower | Frank Nyhuis | Anika Steel | Claire Astbury | Roberto J. Salvatore | Richard Kelly | Sara Moroney | Jida

Viewing History (seen 1 time)

Date ViewedDeviceFormatSourceRating
01/15/2010N/ADVDN/A5 stars
 

Viewing Notes

Quickest comparison you can make about Lake Mungo is to Blair Witch or Paranormal Activity. This is because it’s told as a documentary, a story about a young 16 year old girl who goes missing while out at an Australian lake with her family. Her body is found and a few days later the family starts experiencing a ghost in their house. Mungo weaves together the story with interviews with her family, TV news footage, taped interviews, stills and more.

I was freaked the hell out by Lake Mungo, the way I was when I first saw Blair Witch. In fact I’m writing this review, alone in my house with a rainstorm going on this evening and that shit ain’t helping. And I’m not even a believer in ghosts and I hate those stupid ghost hunter shows on TV, but this movie got under my skin.

For me Paranormal Activity bordered on comedy. Very little of it was effective and scary, minus two scenes. What made Mungo so great was a combination of things that put together, ended up being a solid film. First off, the sound design is phenomenal. It’s a perfect blend of creepy music, very real handheld video camera sounds, and then I’m pretty sure the designer snuck in effects here and there because I kept hearing shit that shouldn’t of been there but was subtle enough to add to it. For instance I swear I heard breathing sounds during footage they were showing on the house. Just small things like that helped to add to the entire package.

Also, the cinematography in Lake Mungo is dead on. If not told it’s a movie it’s very easy to believe that this really is a documentary. The TV news station footage is dead on realistic, as is the interview footage and “found” videos. Obviously a lot of that is pretty easily faked nowadays but something about how they put it together had me almost believing I was watching a real documentary when I knew it wasn’t one. And I think that has a lot to do with the actors doing a bang up job, making me feel for them and drawing me in. Everything about the movie is told subtly and with a deftness that I think the American remake will likely miss.

So yeah, big fan of Lake Mungo. Something I did not expect from a movie to be part of the After Dark Horrorfest. It’s the first of the films from there I’ve seen and I think it’s going to be hard to top it. Good to know the quality is going up.

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