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Ten year ago, a tragedy came to Russell family and changed the lives of teenage siblings Tim and Kaylie forever: their parents was killed and Tim was convicted to be the murder. At the present, Tim is released from protective custody and wants to start his life again, however Kaylie still consists on the guiltlessness of her older brother and finding out other reasons: a cruel super natural force unleaghed through the Lasser Glass, an antique mirror in their childhood home.When Katie discovers the secret of the mirror, life of Tim and Katie becomes more and more troublous because of being haunted by terrible hallucination and they realize that their childhood incubus reappear…
Director Mike Flanagan (Absentia) apparently has not been paying attention to the rules of making mainstream horror movies in America, and that's probably why Oculus is one of the best American horror movies in years.
Without spoiling anything, the last half hour of OCULUS is one of the most stressful, disorienting and hypnotizing divebombs into child's-eye horror I've ever sat through.
Flanagan effectively turns his inanimate killer very much into an entity that's just as deadly as anything with a pulse- a remarkable feat- all while cleverly concocting an intriguing and complicated tale that isn't afraid to get a little nasty.
"Oculus" plays like it went straight to DVD in 2005, its over-reliance on technology as a plot device and distractingly bad hair making it feel instantly dated.