This House Has People in It
This House Has People in It
NR | 16 March 2016 (USA)
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This House Has People in It Trailers

AB Surveillance Solutions, a security company seems to be keeping logs and watching a family as they live a seemingly average life. However it seems that there is something darker going on under the facade.

Reviews
Platicsco

Good story, Not enough for a whole film

CrawlerChunky

In truth, there is barely enough story here to make a film.

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Staci Frederick

Blistering performances.

Delight

Yes, absolutely, there is fun to be had, as well as many, many things to go boom, all amid an atmospheric urban jungle.

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asimov-72292

I'll forgo a synopsis of 'This House Has People In It" because one can find and read it elsewhere. At first I thought the idea of using only security video footage to tell a story was a novel and interesting one but when the point of view changed such that it was impossible for the security camera to have captured it, the effect was jarring and annoying. That was my first gripe. My second was the response of the couple when they realized the unconscious girl had a problem. Who would not call 911 immediately? But they didn't and their odd behavior failed to suspend my disbelief. Then there was the peppering of viewer YouTube videos explaining THHPII. Most of the videos were longer than the original, some much longer. If a story needs to be explained then perhaps the story wasn't told well. I understand vague references are clever. I delight in esoterica but inside jokes and obscura do not a good story make. This House Has People In It spent too much time trying to show how smart it was. The final result was not as bad as, say, Plan Nine From Outer Space, but it wasn't nearly as much fun either. But it was mercifully shorter.

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framptonhollis

The odd Adult Swim "infomercials" series of sorts contains practically all of their best content (other than, obviously, Tim and Eric and The Eric Andre Show), and seems to be where they let their creators really have fun and go mad at play. Directed by the brilliant and twisted humorist, satirist, performance artist, and horror filmmaker Alan Resnick, the Adult Swim crew's own mini David Lynch, 'This House Has People in It' is unapologetically bizarre and occasionally confusing. It is an uncomfortable and genuinely quite creepy combo of comedy and chaos. It is surreal and scary and surprisingly hilarious, very much like practically every project worked upon by Mr. Resnick, and I love the man for it! Now, I am in all probability off to view various analysis videos of this along with a boatload of disturbed rewatchings!

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Horst in Translation (filmreviews@web.de)

"This House Has People in It" is a 12-minute live action short film from last year (2016). It runs for 12 minutes only and was directed by Alan Resnick. He is also one of the writers here. This is an Adult Swim production and actually one of many. I think that frequently they mostly made comedy movies, but this one here is (according to IMDb) horror only. It actually looks like Big Brother footage from, start to finish and this also took away a lot of the appeal at least for me. Cast members are not well-known at all. Story is so-so and as such, it is probably still one of the better components here, but really only because most of the other stuff is entirely forgettable. I personally can only say that if Adult Swim was ever good (and I think they were), then they have really gone south in recent years and this one here is a good piece of evidence for that. I think 4 stars out of 10 (or 2 stars out of 5) is still pretty generous as I really see almost no creativity in here. Watch something else instead. And don't be fooled by the baity picture here on the title's IMDb page.

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MisterWhiplash

I imagine that This House Has People In It could have been what might have occurred had David Lynch been given the keys to the Paranormal Activity franchise. What is going on here? Well, we have a suburban family, or seemingly normal, with a husband a wife a son a baby and a grandmother (and some guy fixing some pipes or something in the basement), and there's also what I think is the couple's teenage daughter laying face-down on the kitchen floor. And at first it seems like she's on the floor because... I'm not even sure, maybe passed out or drunk or on drugs or did something that is making the parents more annoyed than anything. But when the father comes over to move her, she... doesn't get it, she's just staying there. Is she dead? How? More to the point, she seems to be sinking into the floor....The director Alan Resnick spends his 12 minutes going between about eight or nine different surveillance-style cameras laid all over this house (and one camera that gets close to the girl-on-the-floor's face, how exactly that's there I don't know, don't ask I guess), and while this manic and macabre mega-ultra-abyss-darkly comic set piece unfolds in the kitchen, the son is expecting some friends for a birthday party at this exact same time. The cutting between different perspectives makes for the real oddness of the whole piece; this aired on Adult Swim, which also put out a few years back "Too Many Cooks", and there's this aim from the studio to go for experimental cinema, things that we just don't see ANYWHERE else.It would be one thing if the director had his characters explain things - why the girl's on the floor, why she's sinking, what the hell is the grandma doing watching strange things on TV with a guy saying how many times someone should say the word 's***' etc - but then it might ruin what is going on here actually, which is a vision of quickly deevolving hell. This is what happens when you look under the hood of a seemingly normal family and find something otherworldly, mysterious, maybe unholy(!) Or maybe it's just something weird for the sake of it and I'm being played for a fool. But I think it's daring and wonderfully bizarre, and to sustain that for 12 minutes and to make me want to watch it again to see what else I missed or didn't hear (the talking is not as clear as one might hear in a 'Paranormal Activity' movie, which makes sense), and that's something. Certainly not for ALL tastes.

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