Greystone Park

2012 "Do you believe in ghosts?"
3.2| 1h22m| R| en
Details

In October 2009, the filmmakers went into an abandoned psychiatric hospital to explore the 'haunted' institution, famous for its radical treatment of patients with mental illness. Electroshock, insulin therapy, and lobotomies were commonplace. Once inside, the filmmakers quickly discovered that they were not alone.

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Reviews

Matialth Good concept, poorly executed.
FuzzyTagz If the ambition is to provide two hours of instantly forgettable, popcorn-munching escapism, it succeeds.
Bumpy Chip It’s not bad or unwatchable but despite the amplitude of the spectacle, the end result is underwhelming.
Isbel A terrific literary drama and character piece that shows how the process of creating art can be seen differently by those doing it and those looking at it from the outside.
michaeltaken Sometimes tiny details turn a 6 star into a 5 star review. Like the line between a backstory that informs the viewer and crossing that line into some clichéd modern mid-30's social group who have no idea of older flawed medicine and immediately believe 'Evil Lives There!'. The unfortunate line seconds later...'This looks like the opening to every horror movie I've ever sene' hit the level of humour that wasn't intended.Add (in the age of Wikipedia) a shameful shovel full of fake history and mythology...now the optimistic 6 barely scrapes a 3. Lighter touch in the dialogue and an internal logic that wasn't picked out of a Scrabble bag might have saved this nonsense from a generous 2....
natmckn I am, admittedly, a huge fan of the found footage genre of horror films. With that being said, I ignored all previous reviews and gave this movie a shot. I think it's strength is found in its bare-bones approach to the genre. The beginning of the films does a very good job of building suspense while limiting the amount of jump scares. In fact, there were very few of those at all. The horror of it all is a result of the audience really putting themselves into the scene, and every sound and movement just builds the tension to a nerve-wracking state. The actors themselves do a great job of keeping it real. None of the dialogue felt too scripted or forced, and Sean Stone certainly did a great job of adding realism to his character. The plot itself is a little confusing towards the end, but I believe it is certainly forgivable. Instead of shoving a coherent, well-pieced together story down the audience's throat, the film, holding true to the genre's heart, merely shows you what's going on without trying too hard to explain it all. I think that, in itself, is certainly worth applauding. If you're a fan of found footage, I would certainly give this one a shot. I don't think you'll be disappointed.
atinder Greystone Park (2012) think is also know as The Asylum Tapes (UK title) I don normal mind these Hand-Held Camera/Documentary Horror, I seat thought a number of them, Yeah some movies are good and some are really bad and boring none of them have give me headache like this movie as But this movie I found everything to be very annoying from the start first of the movie is too dark, that can't seem to see what the hell is going on. For few moment I thought I sat on the remote and turn TV off by mistake but I Know i didn't cause these banging noise now and again coming form the TV black screen, If wasn't the Darkness of movie, it very annoying fizzing pictures that come on way to often in this movie, This movie just came a really bad headache. The part of the movie you can actually see in the movie is last 2 minutes of the movie, which was only decent part of the movie that may someone Jump if this was their first horror movie and the ending was very predicable and boring. I don't if the acting was good or bad as I couldn't really tell but scripts were really bad too.Quote from the movie Anyone who goes into this building ends up going mad! 1 out of 10
aesgaard41 Thanks to movies likes "Paranormal Activity," ghost and haunted house movies are making a comeback. You could say what "Scream" did for slasher movies, "Paranormal Activity" does for haunted house movies, and within the stream of terrifying and top-notch haunted houses movies to emerge is "Greystone Park." Filmed in a sort of mockumentary style or pseudo-documentary form, the movie stars Sean Stone, son of Oliver Stone of "JFK." Sean meets Alex Wraith, an urban explorer at one of his father's dinner parties and hears about paranormal encounters Alex has had visiting abandoned mental hospitals, of which there are a lot on this country. Along for the trip is Antonella Lentini, a "hauntingly" attractive student from NYC University with a similar interest in insane asylums, and they travel out to explore the abandoned and derelict Greystone Park Mental Hospital in New Jersey for a short film. The best part of the movie is that the location is the real star of the movie. Pieced together from footage shot at Letchworth Village, Creedmore Asylum and Linda Vista Hospital, the setting floats between uneven states of neglect from being completely decimated and ruined to almost preserved as they wander the location looking for activity, getting scared by shadows, unnerved by props and settings or just scaring each other a long the way. Some of what they encounter are shadows set aside for just the audience to see to establish the notion that maybe the ghosts aren't real, and maybe someone else could be in the location trying to scare them. However, a few weak spots come up here and there. One, while the movie is both terrifying and psychological, the conversations of the trio border on the inane as they over-theorize and debate on why ghosts exist and why people are drawn to visiting these locations. Another problem with the movie are the intense blackouts and camera problems that occur throughout. After a while, they get kind of a little annoying. It is hard enough the travel through the setting with the characters without having to also experience their hallucinations and breakdowns with them, especially since the movie frequently goes pitch black and completely unlit at times. At one time or another, each of the main characters gets "possessed" and zones out without any memories of what they did while they were in character. The location alone even dressed up with the odd props and disturbing mutilated dolls is disturbing enough without having to endure the seven glimpses of images compressed down to under two seconds. Another problem I have is there are two many sub-plots with the discussions of Billy Lasher as one of the ghosts, the talks of someone else being in the location, whether or not Alex is trying to scare them, the worries of devil worshippers on the site, the struggles with being lost inside the structure (Alex always claims to know where he is, but he never does) and every other thought that gets passed around in the movie. Bottom line: it's an excellent movie with an intense location, but the "Twilight Zone" ending where it ends up doesn't measure up with the rest of the film or the journey it took getting there.