Barbarian

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Traveling to Detroit for a job interview, a young woman books a rental home. But when she arrives late at night, she discovers that the house is double booked and a strange man is already staying there. Against her better judgement, she decides to spend the evening, but soon discovers that there’s a lot more to fear than just an unexpected house guest (20th Century Studios)

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Reviews (14)

TheEvilTwin 

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English Barbarian is without exaggeration one of the most difficult films to review that I have ever had the opportunity to see. It combines several "sub-films" that are qualitatively very different, and this makes the whole result impossible to rate. For me, the first part is without a doubt the event of the year. A woman arrives at an Airbnb accommodation, but there is already one visitor staying there, and so begins a strange night that takes her to a situation no one would envy. It’s an excellent and original idea, with great acting, perfect dialogue and atmosphere, and a masterful build-up, it all makes the first act an unbeatable part that escalates ad absurdum, and I couldn’t even breathe during its finale. But from that point on (which is about halfway through), the story turns 180 degrees elsewhere and the whole hitherto masterful film collapses like a Ferrari hitting a speed bump at 180 km/h. A whole new story and a new character that replace a very intense film with intelligent characters with a disastrous line with an worse protagonist that seems to have come from the hands of a completely different director. And the film follows the same note until the end. The whole thing feels terribly contradictory, towards the end the film lacks logic and idea, throwing one piece of nonsense after another and doesn't know how to go on. I loved the great horror in the first half, when I was chattering in bliss over the film of the year, I hated the ending and I’m disappointed by the unfulfilled potential at the same time, and actually I don't know how to perceive the end result at all, because combining such diametrically opposed two parts in one film is perhaps not even realistically possible... ()

EvilPhoEniX 

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English A properly intense wild piece that reminds me of my favourite Ghostland. I'm glad to see that every year some talented and unknown horror filmmaker comes along to satisfy our needs for years to come. Zach Cregger has made a very good horror film that can't leave anyone downright cold. Barbarian has perfect craftsmanship (the sound and cinematography are of Wan's caliber). Georgina Campbell and Bill Skarsgård are both perfect (Justin Long a little less so, but it’s alright). The opening is a little slower, but once the action moves to the basement, it starts a hell of an uncomfortable, chilling and intense horror with a very uncomfortable and claustrophobic setting, a properly creepy villain – the best one so far in five years. The film also emphatically emphasizes the rational behavior of the characters, which is a very nice touch. It also manages to pleasantly and unpleasantly surprise the viewer on several occasions, the mystery and thick atmosphere works as well as the fear of the unknown. There were a few heart-attack-inducing jump-scares and of course there was gore – basically, everything we want to see in this genre. I'm giving a standing ovation, tearing my hair out and roaring HELL YEA!. Anyone who is going to be mad at this movie, I'm going to be mad at them. 9/10. ()

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Marigold 

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English The concise first third of Barbarians with the wonderful Bill is great; the second has an unexpected comedic edge (I roared with laughter at the twist from jump-scare to reality farce), and the third is a mishmash, but... the original mix of inverse home invasion, lactation instruction, collecting of VHS snuff flicks, drama about cruel motherhood and black comedy about the MeToo movement simply kept me watching, even though some of the dramaturgical choices are very dubious and the film barely holds together in places. As another entry in the canon of Detroit high-concept horror movies (the magnificent and in some ways related Don’t Breathe and the more allegorical It Follows are worth mentioning), it is indeed a more than respectable work. A place where society has collapsed invites the rise of barbarism. ()

Goldbeater 

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English I find it a bit sad and perhaps unfair that audiences in recent years have given more favorable to horror films that subvert, satirise and mock genre tropes, rather than to some of the attempted serious and atmospheric horror films of the traditional cut, which at best end up with a 58% rating, but at the same time it cannot be denied that Barbarian works well in its subversion and surprise. ()

Gilmour93 

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English Postpartum psychosis under the stairs. Just like in It Follows or when the Freaky Blinder Stephen Lang is wreaking havoc, the eerie setting of an abandoned suburb in Deathroit works, but after a carefully built atmosphere of uncertainty in the first part, it gradually begins to fall apart. The rather amusing finale merely alternates between easily predictable moments and those that try to be original at all costs, and I was just waiting for the survivor to be hit by a car from the local department that neither helps nor protects a second before the credits rolled. I would be cautious about calling it the horror event of the year. At best, it's quarterly. By the way, Bill Skarsgård, with his appearance and lack of confidence, is like a young Steve Buscemi. ()

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