The Forest

2016

Action / Horror / Mystery / Thriller

74
Rotten Tomatoes Critics - Rotten 10% · 138 reviews
Rotten Tomatoes Audience - Spilled 22% · 10K ratings
IMDb Rating 4.8/10 10 45574 45.6K

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Plot summary

Set in the Aokigahara Forest, a real-life place in Japan where people go to end their lives. Against this backdrop, a young American woman comes in search of her twin sister, who has mysteriously disappeared.


Uploaded by: FREEMAN
March 30, 2016 at 06:00 PM

Director

Top cast

Natalie Dormer as Sara / Jess Price
Taylor Kinney as Aiden
Stephanie Vogt as Valerie
Eoin Macken as Rob
720p.BLU 1080p.BLU
692.88 MB
1280*682
English 2.0
PG-13
23.976 fps
1 hr 33 min
Seeds 9
1.43 GB
1920*1024
English 2.0
PG-13
23.976 fps
1 hr 33 min
Seeds 15

Movie Reviews

Reviewed by Zbigniew_Krycsiwiki 3 / 10

This is a difficult title to review, because I'm not entirely sure I watched anything

This entire film is just set-ups for things which never really happen, and a handful of really lame, and completely predictable, jump scares.

Plot begins in flashback-land, as Sarah travels to Japan, in search of her missing sister, Jess, who disappeared in an area known for suicides, and is said to be haunted by the vengeful spirits of those who have died there. We are introduced, briefly, to her... husband? Boyfriend? It isn't made clear. Whoever the bloody hell he is, he really is only there for the seemingly contractually obligated twist ending. He is mostly unnecessary to the plot, and could be edited out of the film, and his absence would not be noticed.

After arriving in Japan, we're introduced to Rob, and the story can't decide if he is trustworthy, or a killer. An interesting twist two thirds into the film seems to portray him as being somehow responsible for her sister's death, but then it seems unsure of itself, whether he is a killer, or if it is the restless spirits in the forest trying to trick her. Little is done with that, and it's unfortunate, because that is the most interesting part of the film.

A weird (although not as creepy as the film wants her to be) schoolgirl is either following her in the forest, or is a few steps ahead of her, luring her farther off the beaten path, deeper into the forest, not because it has any relation to the plot, but just because it's a thing which happens.

A few unnecessary, and blatantly obvious, jump scares happen, again, not for any real reason, they happen just because.

Judging by its writing credits, the three writers ( "Nick Antosca and Sarah Cornwell and Ben Ketai" ) all worked on the screenplay separately, independent of each other, as their names are all separated by the word "and". If they had collaborated together, their names would have been linked by an ampersand ( & ), as per Writer's Guild regulations. That is an odd situation, I cannot think of any other title with the writers credited that way. Perhaps that is why the film feels so disjointed, and oddly structured, and doesn't do much with its surprisingly good cast, and competent cinematography?

And this is probably the 6000th film in the past five years to end with a character lunging at the screen in the final second, in the the most predictable, over used twist/ jump scare ending in cinematic history.

Reviewed by nogodnomasters 6 / 10

Do not leave the path

This is a film that takes place in Japan's Suicide forest that doesn't involve bad dubbing or subtitles. (Points for that.) Sara (Natalie Dormer) gets a feeling something is wrong and her twin sister needs help. Sara flies 6,000 miles to Japan and discovers Jess (Natalie Dormer with black hair) has gone missing in Japan's suicide forest. She manages to get two guys to help her look for her. The film is rather ho-hum up to about 45 minutes into the film when they (plot spoiler!) find her tent. It isn't until this point does the film become worth watching. Then the night time creepy stuff happens as the forest, "plays with people's mind."

Make it a rental.

Reviewed by SnoopyStyle 4 / 10

rather dull

Sara Price (Natalie Dormer) receives a call from the Japanese police about her twin sister Jess. She was seen walking into Aokigahara forest where most people go to commit suicide. Sara goes in search for her twin sister. She is befriended by writer Aiden and with Michi as guide, they go into the forest.

I do like the live shrimp sushi and found it weirdly funny Cronenberg-like. The maggots are a more common body horror. Otherwise, all the horror moments are laughably bland and unimaginative. The movie's greatest sin is that it's rather dull. None of it is scary. All too often, it's a dream. The pacing is slow. It's a lot of blah.

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