Starring
Erica Landofi, Carola Cudemo, Simone Valentino, Micol Damilano, Ricco
Marazzita. Directed by Alessandro Antonaci, Stefano Mandala &
Daniel Lascar. (94 min)
ON
DVD FROM DARK SKY FILMS
Review
by Josey, the Sudden Cat😼
In
addition to being an absolutely bitchin' title for a horror movie, You
Die is a cellphone app that lets the dead reach-out from beyond
the grave and kill you if you fail to download it to someone else’s
phone within 24 hours.
If
the premise sparks a little deja vu, you ain’t alone. Granted,
I haven't seen many Italian horror films since the '80s, but
if this one is any indication, their penchant for thievery remains
alive and well. You Die is highly derivative of Ringu,
though its trio of directors have a few nifty tricks up their
sleeves.
After
letting a stranger borrow her cellphone, young Asia (Erica Landofi)
discovers a mysterious app, called You Die, has been downloaded. Not
only does she see random ghostly figures through the screen, a
24-hour timer begins counting down. At first, she and her friends
think its just some kind of game – sort of an evil Pokemon Go
– but soon Asia sees dead people stalking her wherever she goes.
Not only that, she’s is unable to delete the app or discard her
phone (attempting either just speeds up the clock).
In
Ringu, whoever watched the mysterious videotape had exactly
seven days to avoid dying by showing it to some other poor rube. You
Die takes the same basic premise and ups the ante. Asia learns
that downloading the app onto another phone doesn’t let you off the
hook. It simply buys you another 24 hours, meaning you’re required
to find a new victim every day in order to stay alive.
Pokemon No! |
Plotwise,
You Die doesn’t hold up to a ton of scrutiny, especially
during a key scene of exposition where a guy Asia meets on the dark
web explains how the app works. According to him, you aren’t
actually supposed to tell anyone else how it works. So how
does he know that unless he
was told? That means you actually have to break that rule
in order for it to spread to more than one phone, otherwise it
just dies with the person you shared it with. But since there doesn’t
appear to be any consequences for breaking the rule, why is there a rule
in the first place?
But despite
that lapse in logic, a borrowed premise and some obligatory jump-scares, You
Die is an atmospheric little chiller with decent performances and a
likable protagonist. It’s seldom very scary, but does manage to
maintain a consistently foreboding tone, culminating in an
appropriately bleak resolution.
KITTY CONSENSUS:
NOT BAD. LIKE CAT CHOW.
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