

Lights Out
You were right to be afraid of the dark.
Rebecca must unlock the terror behind her little brother's experiences that once tested her sanity, bringing her face to face with a supernatural spirit attached to their mother.
Runtime
1h 21m
Language
EN
Budget
$4.9M
Revenue
$149.4M
Cast
Faces behind the story

Teresa Palmer
Rebecca

Maria Bello
Sophie

Gabriel Bateman
Martin

Alexander DiPersia
Bret

Alicia Vela-Bailey
Diana

Geser ke samping untuk melihat lainnya.
Gallery
Frames that sell the world






Reviews
Audience signals
My son Julian (13) and my lady Tammy, themselves two horror-film aficionados, and I went and saw this theatrically, and we were all quite pleased, though at least Julian and I tend to go for the classic stuff. Well worth checking out, if you're in for this sort of thing.
Although a simplistic and familiar theme is explored involving sinister forces tormenting a child in distress, Swedish director David F. Sandberg brings something chillingly fresh to his horror/psychological offering **Lights Out**. Sandberg, making his feature film debut, delivers an adequate amount of tension and trickery for all things considered ominous in the edginess of darkness. Lights Out is a reasonable chiller that demonstrates a decent measurement of depth without tripping over its cliched feet. The characterizations that go “bump in the night” in **Lights** are not as disposable as one is routinely used to experiencing in produced over-indulgent, generic boofests. The construction of **Lights Out** feels atmospheric and sparse at times but the manufactured thrills somehow add the necessary alarm factor in a psychological thriller that boasts solid performances particularly by actress Maria Bello as the tortured soul at the center of the CGI creepiness. Sandberg’s adventurous direction and screenwriter Eric Heisserer’s spell-binding script works in part because Lights Out never extends itself beyond its lean and claustrophobic confines. The storytelling is taut and the scare tactics create worthy jolts without further monotony. There are predictable jumpy cuts and the movie never fully deviates from the conventional suspenseful landscape that populates countless fright fables. Still, **Lights Out** manages to shine some shady brightness on this effectively drawn hair-raising spectacle. The premise introduces the long-lasting notion of childhood fear and despair on the jeopardized shoulders of young insomniac Rebecca (Teresa Palmer) who has long since left the haunting homestead where the evil vibes of a dastardly spirit had tortured her relentlessly. Rebecca is now concerned that the tawdry tradition of this shifty spook is now about to terrify her little 10-year old stepbrother Martin (Gabriel Bateman). In fact, Martin wants to split his hellish household and escape to Rebecca’s place for some guaranteed safety. After all, who can blame the poor kid for wanting to abandon his doomed domicile. Enter the problematic Sophie (Bello). As the nervous-wreck mother to both Rebecca and Martin, Sophie has had her share of disappointments, heartaches and breakdowns in the past and present. It was revealed that Sophie had spent some critical time in a mental institution many years ago which explains her current complicated issues with men/relationships not to mention the strained connection with her disillusioned children. More important, Sophie faces the dilemma of encountering an assortment of deceased figures that randomly pop up from time to time within her expansive, worrisome walls. But nothing is more arousing or concerning than Sophie’s run-ins with the devilish Diana (Alicia Vela-Bailey), her troubled off-the-wall pal and fellow asylum inmate from yesteryear. What is so jittery about Diana’s presence in the house is that she is so clingy and protective of her precious Sophie. The key to Diana’s horrifying existence is when the lights are turned off, Thus, it allows the deranged feminine entity to roam the house in a blanket of blackness while staking the beleaguered Sophie in the process. **Lights Out** (originally Sandberg’s short film competition entry years ago) acts as a symbolic mirror reflecting the echoes of mental illness and inherent self-destruction concerning the fragile psyche. The film percolates convincingly when Bello’s Sophie is scarred constantly by the harried ties that bind. Sandberg demonstrates a wounded woman on the edge of insanity. The suffering of inner conflict and outer self-doubt has consumed Sophie to the point where she has personalized her self-inflicted poison with baggage ranging from a couple of deceased husbands to the harsh reality that her children are weary of her toxic nuttiness. Bello displays the brokenness and confusion of her portrayal with applauded conviction. The sister-brother tandem of Palmer’s Rebecca and Bateman’s Martin is both comforting and intriguing as they are joined at the hip in their fright night delusions. Vela-Bailey’s Diana is deliciously shadowy as the intrusive Diana applying the statically gloom. The nightmarish special effects are challenging and imaginative and cinematographer Marc Spicer’s experimental lighting gives **Lights Out** its gripping sheen. Overall, Sandberg’s menacing mechanism of a movie certainly forces the shaky hand of its skeptical audience to snuggle up to the nearest light switch. **Lights Out** (2016) Rat-Pac Tune Entertainment 1 hr, 21 mins. Starring: Maria Bello, Teresa Palmer, Gabriel Bateman, Billy Burke, Alicia Vela-Bailey, Alexander DiPersia Directed by: David F. Sandberg MPAA Rating: PG-13 Genre: Horror/Psychological Thriller/Supernatural Critic’s rating: *** stars (out of 4 stars) (c) **Frank Ochieng** (2016)
Recommendations
Films that continue this mood and momentum.

The Endless
2017 / Science Fiction, Horror

Bring Her Back
2025 / Horror

Poltergeist
1982 / Horror

Insidious: Chapter 2
2013 / Horror, Thriller

The Conjuring
2013 / Horror, Thriller

Paranormal Activity 3
2011 / Horror, Mystery

28 Weeks Later
2007 / Horror, Thriller

Cobweb
2023 / Horror

The Entity
1982 / Horror, Mystery

Black Phone 2
2025 / Horror, Thriller

Talk to Me
2023 / Horror

Hereditary
2018 / Horror, Mystery

Thir13en Ghosts
2001 / Horror, Thriller

Oculus
2014 / Horror

Insidious: The Red Door
2023 / Horror, Thriller

Insidious: Chapter 3
2015 / Horror, Thriller

Funny Games
2008 / Thriller, Horror

Sinners
2025 / Horror, Action

Daddy's Head
2024 / Horror

Insidious
2011 / Horror, Thriller
Geser ke samping untuk melihat lainnya.
Similar Movies
Adjacent stories from the same cinematic neighborhood.

Ghosts vs. Aliens 03
2007 / Comedy, Drama

Ghosts vs. Aliens
2002 / Science Fiction, Horror

Ghosts vs. Aliens 02
2003 / Horror, Comedy

The Dark Hours
2005 / Horror, Science Fiction

Bride of Re-Animator
1990 / Horror, Comedy

Slit Mouth Woman: The Second
2010 / Horror

Keitai Ura Site: Kuchisake-onna
2010 / Horror

Hikiko-san vs. Kuchisake-onna
2011 / Horror

Kuchisake-onna vs Kashima-san
2017 / Horror

Hellraiser: Deader
2005 / Horror, Thriller

Possessed
2006 / Horror

Sinister Circle
2015 / Horror

Phantom Pains
2024 / Horror, Thriller

Witchboard
1986 / Horror, Mystery

Cho: A Tale of Voodoo
2025 / Drama, Horror
I Dare You.
TBA / Horror

The Possession of Michael King
2014 / Horror

Blood Debt
2024 / Horror

A Nightmare on Elm Street
2010 / Horror, Mystery

Tormented
2009 / Horror, Comedy
Geser ke samping untuk melihat lainnya.







