Saturday, June 2, 2012

Review: 'Chernobyl Diaries'

By Clark Collis, EW.com
June 1, 2012 -- Updated 2029 GMT (0429 HKT)
A still from
A still from "Chernobyl Diaires."
STORY HIGHLIGHTS
  • "Chernobyl Diaries" follows six twentysomethings who visit the long abandoned town of Pripyat
  • Our hero-victims are being menaced, and rapidly thinned out
  • The result is superior to many of the low-budget terror flicks

(EW.com) -- Is it too soon to make a horror film inspired by the 1986 Chernobyl disaster, in which a vast area of the world was radioactively contaminated following the catastrophic meltdown of a Ukrainian nuclear power plant?

No, according to Oren Peli.

The "Paranormal Activity" writer-director both co-wrote and co-produced this tale of six vacationing twentysomethings who make the egregious error of signing up for an ''extreme tourism'' outing to the Chernobyl-adjacent and long abandoned town of Pripyat. (Newcomer Bradley Parker directs.)

Before you can say ''What, was the ballet all sold out?'' our hero-victims are being menaced, and rapidly thinned out, in an array of ways it does not behoove us to disclose here.

If nowhere near as scary as the original "Paranormal," the result is superior to many of the low-budget terror flicks that have arrived since (yes, "The Devil Inside," we're talking about you) and benefits hugely from Dimitri Diatchenko's performance as moviedom's Worst. Tour. Guide. Ever. B--

See the full story at EW.com.

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