High Tension 2010 Horror Movie Review
Horror movies Review
For much of its running time, High Tension earns its title as a gory and suspenseful tale of hot pursuit. Originally titled Switchblade Romance in England, and trimmed of its most excessive gore to avoid an NC-17 rating during its brief U.S. theatrical release, this French horror film provokes a memorable case of high anxiety from its alluring female lead (Cecile de France), but it’s an otherwise brainless exercise with a ludicrous conclusion that renders the entire film null and void. It’s essentially a Texas Chainsaw wanna-be, which isn’t such a bad thing if you’re a horror buff with an appetite for gruesome death at the hands of a brutal and nameless serial killer. Dressed in greasy coveralls and a baseball cap, and driving a rusty old delivery van, the killer indiscriminately destroys an entire family before chasing after the tomboyish Marie (de France), who is trapped in a nonsensical screenplay that won’t let her go. With a high body count and buckets of bloodshed, High Tension has moments of delirious intensity, which is probably why Lion’s Gate (bolstered by the success of Saw and other horror hits) deemed the film worthy of U.S. release with some (but not all) of its French dialogue badly dubbed in English. It’s horror for die-hards only, and on those terms it’s worth a look. —Jeff Shannon


















