Film Snail

House at the End of the Street
House at the End of the Street

5.8

House at the End of the Street

PG-13·2012·101m

Summary

A mother and daughter move to a new town and find themselves living next door to a house where a young girl murdered her parents. When the daughter befriends the surviving son, she learns the story is far from over.

Crew

Director

Mark Tonderai

Screenplay

David Loucka

Story

Jonathan Mostow

Reviews

John Chard

John Chard

June 29, 2014

5

Lawrence of Suburbia.

A little better than its garbage reputation, as evidence by the support it got at the box office from its target audience, Mark Tonderai’s horror/thriller is safe genre film making. There’s no intelligence in the screenplay, no copious amounts of blood letting, the characters do dumb things and in truth it unfolds as a standard girl in peril movie. These things are what have led to it being savaged by critics, but backed by a trio of strong performances from Jennifer Lawrence, Elisabeth Shue and Max Thieriot, boosted by a genuine narrative surprise and the fact that Tonderai is able to do the peril motifs with suspenseful impact, ensures House at the End of the Street is at least a decent enough time waster. 5/10

Media

Status:

Released

Original Language:

English

Budget:

$6,900,000.00

Revenue:

$44,287,131.00

Keywords

parent child relationship
child hero
cross dressing
abuse
father son conflict