Marks a return to a not-so-distant time when horror movies weren't soul-rotting atrocities but just enjoyably bad.Read Full Review »
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LOS ANGELES TIMES: Kevin Crust
Outdoes recent releases such as "Boogeyman" in the fright department, but the "Dawson's Creek" sensitivity and unsatisfying effects undermine the lupine anxiety.Read Full Review »
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ReelViews: James Berardinelli
If there's the kernel of a good story buried somewhere deep in Cursed, it never pops. As werewolf movies go, this one is on par with "An American Werewolf in Paris," but at least that dud had plenty of gore and Julie Delpy's bare breasts to recommend it.Read Full Review »
30
Washington Post: Stephen Hunter
Wes Craven, who started the "Nightmare on Elm Street" series, should know a lot better.Read Full Review »
30
Village Voice: Ben Kenigsberg
The scariest thing in the movie is a cameo by Scott Baio.Read Full Review »
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The New York Times: Dana Stevens
It's not bad enough to make you curse, but you are likely to laugh when you should scream, and to roll your eyes when you are meant to laugh.Read Full Review »
25
ENTERTAINMENT WEEKLY: Owen Gleiberman
Screenwriter Kevin Williamson (the Scream trilogy), having bottomed out in the horror genre, now dips below bottom (there isn't a line that has his knowing sweet-and-sour zing).Read Full Review »