Studio: Tubi
Director: Eric Tessier
Writer: Dennis Heaton
Producer: Graham Ludlow, Kaleigh Kavanagh
Stars: Michael Xavier, Tommie-Amber Pirie, Ennis Esmer, Jenny Raven, Vanessa Smythe, Mercedes Morris, Dillon Casey, Kenny Wong, Brendan Fehr
Review Score:
Summary:
Six friends face frightening paranormal activity when they attempt to renovate the infamous Amityville Horror house.
Review:
I can't tell you when or why an Amityville movie would ever be "good" for a viewer. Probably because I can't think of a time or a situation where an Amityville movie would ever be good for anyone.
I can tell you when and why an Amityville movie might be "good" for a reviewer. Just note that when I say "good" in the sentences above, I don't mean it in a qualitative sense. That term never applies whenever Amityville is involved.
After writing reviews for over a decade, it gets to be like riding a bike thanks to the mental muscle memory gained from doing it regularly. Even still, after taking some extended time off from the practice, rustiness remains an inevitability. In my case, where I've only been infrequently writing film critiques during the preceding few months, I figured I could use a softball to help me get back in the groove. And what better way is there for a genre critic to do that than to get down and dirty in the DTV depths of Amityville? These movies are so baseline, reviews practically write themselves.
"The Amityville Curse" is a 2023 thriller released as a Tubi Original. It's also a 1990 film that was only the fifth entry in the long-running supernatural saga back when Amityville was still something of a formal franchise. Both are loosely based on a fiction novel with the same title written by Hans Holzer, a parapsychologist who investigated the original Ocean Avenue haunting. The two films share some character names in common, although the similarities end there and neither really follows events from the book much at all.
Casual Tubi viewers who probably don't know there are literally hundreds of Amityville movies out in the wild might catch this updated "The Amityville Curse" and be like, "What is this nonsense?" For the rest of us seasoned horror hounds who are painfully aware of how far underground the bar lies for Amityville nowadays, "The Amityville Curse" actually comes off as pretty passable for this sort of throwaway thing. Now that I think about it though, if you're turning on Tubi in the first place, you shouldn't be anticipating triple-A quality anyway, so maybe it meets low expectations no matter who you are. After all, we don't go to Tubi for original horror content. Tubi is where we turn for reruns of forgotten TV shows from the 80s and 90s when there are no better entertainment options on hand.
However, if you're an indie filmmaker shooting a digital fright flick on chump change with a gaggle of no-names in a single location, it seems like a big boon to have that "Tubi Original" banner before the title. In an overcrowded market of Amityville muck, you're much better off having Tubi drop your plop directly onto a lazy person's landing page than hoping they'll somehow stumble upon it at the infinite bottom of an Amazon Prime rental barrel.
In this "The Amityville Curse," six friends purchase the infamous Long Island home with the intention of renovating and reselling it. Nigh immediately, doors start creaking and lights start flickering. Soon, supernatural activity escalates into supernatural slaughter as people are paranormally picked off one by one.
Something "The Amityville Curse" has that its similarly pedestrian peers don't is a pop of personality in its cast. A fractured family or partying teenagers are nowhere to be found. In their place are actual adults with real jobs like restaurateur, lawyer, and university instructor. Their dialogue is more convivial than purely functional, and even amusing like when one woman saves her friend from a falling mirror and gets a disappointed "I kinda wish you'd caught it" as a thank you because she doesn't want to pick up the pieces. Limited though they may be, these are people who reference personal histories, have distinct relationships with one another, and exhibit variable behavior patterns that aren't describable in simple summations like "bitch," "alpha a-hole," or "goody two-shoes."
On the other hand, what none of them have is any sort of lasting empathetic reaction whenever one of them dies in a shocking manner. Oh, they'll initially cover a gasp with a hand or something. Then in the next scene, they'll act like, "Man, can you believe our buddy we've known since college inexplicably flew out of a second story window to violently smash himself on the pavement outside? Anyway, who wants more coffee?" I mean, for crying out loud Lucy, Billie was both your girlfriend and your business partner. Show a little concern over her unexpected electrocution, why don't you?
"The Amityville Curse" also has moderately improved production values over those aforementioned peers in its low-budget category, with "moderately" lifting a heavy load in that assessment. Overexposure still creates blown-out windows and bright foreheads on actors lit like they're on a telenovela. And sure, the size of the house's exterior doesn't come close to matching interior dimensions. But, they still gave one bedroom quarter-moon windows, someone took a trip to Sherwin Williams so they could paint a room red, and the camera moves in a circle when two people have a conversation. It might be hard to tell if you don't have countless cheaper Amityville entries to compare this to, but "The Amityville Curse" puts in noticeable effort.
Now, do any of these "it could have been worse" observations mean you should watch the movie? Ask yourself this: Why would anyone willingly watch any Amityville movie made after 2005? Filmmakers apparently haven't figured it out yet, but horror fans know not to give a shot to vaporous Amityville thrillers when so many superior choices for small-screen creeps exist.
I wish I had more snark to sling, except "The Amityville Curse" is essentially what you'd think the average offspring of a marriage between Amityville and Tubi would look like. I won't bother to gauge what it might score without a bell curve. On a scale adjusted for "Amityville," it's a 50/100, which isn't too bad considering 90% of movies with that word in their title fall far below that midline.
Review Score: 50
At least the movie only runs 70 minutes, though I suppose that extra 10 technically disqualifies it from being a literal amateur hour.