Havenhurst
It is a collection of secrets and events that we live in differently through that house which seems very strange. The story begins with a troubled young woman living in a Gothic apartment building, a beautifully preserved building. It seems that this house has more than 3000 people, and it does not stop there, but this house contains innumerable dark secrets in a seemingly strange time.
22 February 1964, Walnut Creek, California, USA
5 January 1988, Boston, Massachusetts, USA
8 September 1979, Massachusetts, USA
17 December 1978, Tarzana, California, USA
February 21, 2017
It's at best, a mediocre genre entry as everything feels very low stakes, and nothing is ever logically resolved or given a satisfying conclusion.
February 11, 2017
Despite the strong efforts of everyone involved, Havenhurst proves all too unimaginative in its formulaic recycling of genre tropes.
February 09, 2017
A tricky house-of-horrors where once you check in, you never check out-no matter how badly the viewer will want to.
February 04, 2017
Never quite finds a distinctive narrative slant or atmosphere of its own. Nonetheless, director-co-scenarist Andrew C. Erin's film will pass the time tolerably enough for genre fans.
November 01, 2016
A boring movie where the absurdity adds to the grotesque scenes in the search to discover Evil. [Full review in Spanish]
February 13, 2017
Like the building at its core, the bones are strong but the flesh hanging from them is weak and sickly.
October 26, 2016
The only consistency in this film are the jumpscares from the soundtrack, which eventually become the most irritating thing. [Full review in Spanish]
March 01, 2017
The only real horror of Havenhurst is that someone got this much budget for a film without a script.
February 10, 2017
Havenhurst is a tight, tense and claustrophobic thriller that's held together by some perfectly-pitched performances.
February 09, 2017
"Havenhurst" never has as much fun with its premise as it should, and it peaks before its final scenes.

