Your score has been saved for Ghost Town Anthology. Would you like to write a review? Ghost Town Anthology tip-toes during its entire duration, quietly examining the past and present of a town There are no featured audience reviews for Ghost Town Anthology (Répertoire des Villes The percentage of Approved Tomatometer Critics who have given this movie a positive review.

One of the major benefits to MUBI's streaming gimmick, which has now been replaced with a traditional library similar to the Criterion Channel, was that it forced a curated series of specific films so as to avoid the overwhelming nature of having too many choices. Ghost Town Anthology creeps up on you with its haunting premise. Still, this is by no means a horror movie, despite a few disquieting aspects.

Ghost Town Anthology

It's then — after a winter's worth of haphazard and half-sketched build-up. 'Ghost Town Anthology' ('Repertoire des villes disparues'): Film Review There are no scares in Ghost Town Anthology, but a disquieting mood slowly builds as the dead start returning to haunt a rural village shocked out of its stagnant inertia and imperviousness to change. Ghost Town Anthology is the perfect reminder of why we need indie movies more than ever before, especially for the horror genre. Ghost Town Anthology is a subdued, atmospheric and bone-chilling chronicle of a stagnant and closed-off small town grieving over the death of a young resident while. People are leaving small towns for the big cities in search of work, and as more and more people leave, the town that they left behind turns into a ghost town, and the same is happening the world over, but the fictional Canadian town of Irénée-les-Neiges feels the effects of a changing world heavily as. In Ghost Town Anthology, it's also communal.

Trailer Ghost Town Anthology

Based on Quebec author and filmmaker Laurence Olivier's novel, and reminiscent of the stories of Ray Bradbury, Ghost Town Anthology is more in the. From then on, amid the winter snow, a disturbing temper slowly sinks on the local inhabitants. This content is available to globeandmail.com subscribers.

When young Simon Dubé dies in a car accident, the villagers' tranquil and regulated existence is thrown out of step. People are decidedly reluctant to talk about the accident. Time seems to lose all meaning. The parents' guide to what's in this movie.