In the film’s most entertaining bit of sleight-of-hand, an errant screw travels from the hull of a flying airplane into the coffee cup of a woman down on the ground.
Night Watch (2005)
Tomatometer
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Reviews Counted:123
Fresh:71
Rotten:52
Average Rating:5.9/10
Consensus: This Russian horror/fantasy film pits darkness and light against each other using snazzy CGI visuals to create an extraordinary atmosphere of a dank, gloomy city wrestling with dread.
Rated: R [See Full Rating] for strong violence, disturbing images and language.
Runtime: 1 hr 55 mins
Genre: Horror/Suspense
Theatrical Release:Feb 17, 2006 Limited
Box Office: $1,350,726
Synopsis: Set in present-day Moscow, the movie begins with a quick skip back through the centuries to inform us how a delicate truce was struck between the forces of Light and Dark. These forces still exist... Set in present-day Moscow, the movie begins with a quick skip back through the centuries to inform us how a delicate truce was struck between the forces of Light and Dark. These forces still exist in Moscow, with both sides keeping a close eye on each other as they attempt to disguise themselves from the earth's mere mortals. NIGHT WATCH's central character is Anton Gorodetsky (Konstantin Khabensky), who is defined as an "Other" by the legions of Light and Dark. Anton and his cohorts live as vampires, and await the arrival of a virgin who will announce the resumption of hostilities between the forces of Light and Dark; as the film progresses, it becomes apparent that an epic battle is just around the corner. One of the biggest films of all time in its native Russia, director Timur Bekmambetov's NIGHT WATCH positions itself somewhere in between THE MATRIX and BLADE in the pantheon of CGI-fueled sci-fi flicks. Although the plot is mind-boggling and occasionally verges on the incomprehensible, Bekmambetov is presumably using this first part of the trilogy to lure viewers into his wild cinematic world. Impressively, Bekmambetov's film was shot on a tiny budget, but it belies its meager origins. Even the English subtitles are integrated into several scenes, with words zipping across the screen and melting into the action as a heavy-metal soundtrack thumps away. Knowing he is set to film two sequels, Bekmambetov leaves his audience hanging as NIGHT WATCH nears its climax, with his second installment (DAY WATCH) promising further FX-laden feuding, and, in an intriguing twist, an English-language climax to the trilogy with DUSK WATCH. [More]
Starring: Vladimir Menshov, Konstantin Khabensky, Valery Zolotukhin, Maria Poroshina
Starring: Vladimir Menshov, Konstantin Khabensky, Valery Zolotukhin, Maria Poroshina, Galina Tunina, Victor Verzhbitsky
Director: Timur Bekmambetov
Director: Timur Bekmambetov
Screenwriter: Sergei Lukianenko, Timur Bekmambetov, Laeta Kalogridis
Producer: Konstantin Ernst, Anatoly Maximov
Composer: Yuri Poteyenko
Studio: Fox Searchlight Pictures
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Reviews for Night Watch
If Night Watch is energetic, it is also frenetic; if neatly plotted, it is also too open-ended, a set-up for the remaining two installments of a trilogy.
While it echoes a host of CGI-heavy, action-oriented supernatural thrillers, it manages to retain its own distinct identity. Although this first chapter in a three-part tale is inevitably overburdened with back story, it ends on one hell of a cliff-hanger
A wildly entertaining fantasy thriller that propels Russian cinema into the 21st century.
Night Watch is narratively confused if visually robust. The picture doesn't work as a standalone story but it sets the stage for a potentially interesting second chapter.
Entire horror flicks could be built around the ideas Night Watch throws away: monsters who are visible only in mirrors, evil toys sprouting spider legs. May the two planned sequels be equally cool.
To learn the actual outcome of the epic battle, we'll have to wait for Leg 2, Day Watch, which has already been shot, and Leg 3, Dusk Watch, which will be produced in English by Fox. Wake me when they're here.
All kinds of shape-shifters and vengeful-lover ghouls are on the loose. Add that to typically chaotic Moscow traffic, and you've got a nonstop fright fest.
I don't remember an iota of the plot, a memorable performance or anything emotional or thematic, but I'm not surprised that every studio wants a piece of Bekmambetov.
The slick, colorful, nicely acted Night Watch is all I ask and never get from Hollywood's monochromatic, humorless vampire pictures.
There are more supernatural abilities on display here than in your average X-Men comic, and there always seems to be a convenient power on hand to save the day.
There's an interesting, if derivative (unless they never had The Matrix and Blade in Russia), imagination at work here.
Underneath all the sound and fury, there's very little to care about.
The filmmakers don't seem to realize that if a movie with a mythology this groan-inducingly convoluted doesn't have a sense of humor about itself, the laughs are going to come anyway. They just won't be of the intentional variety.
To appreciate Night Watch, you have to accept it as one of those chaotic cartoon movies that refuse to completely add up.
...a grungy, flashy looking film that should please genre fans, but on the whole it's all rather predictable. The truest test - whether it inspires a desire for its sequels - only attains a half-hearted passing grade.
A box-office phenomenon in Russia, the convoluted horror fantasy Night Watch might be described as Star Wars Meets the Vampires in Moscow.
In the final act, the movie dons a more human face and commits to an absorbing tale of crime and punishment.
there is something dynamic in the cool, stylized visuals and the world-weary zeitgeist punctuated with fanciful almost heretical whimsy.
A fractious fiasco: whiplash camera movement set to raging blasts of death metal, a story so incoherent it made me wish I was watching, instead, the collected outtakes from Van Helsing.
Latest News for Night Watch
June 17, 2008:
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April 24, 2008:
Bekmambetov Says Dusk Watch Is On Hold ![]()
Holding your breath waiting for Dusk Watch, the planned sequel to Timur Bekmambetov's Night Watch and Day Watch? Well, don't. More...
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September 14, 2007:
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