Suspecting that people are transforming into malevolent shape-shifters, Wyatt flees to New York City to seek out his estranged childhood friend Christian.
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What really sinks this semi-weird movie is the predictably disappointing ending that lets you down in every conceivable way. Most movies of this sort are good at build-up but suck at wrapping things up intelligently and neatly. (The David Lynch school of BS writing.) And that's what separates the men from the boys in cinema, the excellent mystery films from the mediocre ones. In fact, nothing is wrapped up; the conclusion is simply confusing, offering no answers at all: is he insane or not? was he cured?If you're going to revolve the ENTIRE movie around a simple two-way dilemma (insanity or aliens, in this case), you'd better reward the viewer with SOMETHING, anything. But we get squat. Very lazy. Pity, because a smart ending could have turned this into a well-made movie. Even cheesy hand-to-hand chop-sokey combat between some aliens and the two protagonists would have been better than what they gave us.Or were they saving money on CGI?
Wyatt has secret knowledge he can't easily divulge to others: he knows that malevolent entities are replacing humans in their own skin. Only he and a few others can hope to stave off this invasion, but it's difficult to know who can be trusted and saved, even if it's one's best friend...They Look Like People is a simply-made and effective horror film that actually isn't exactly a horror film. It has a "body snatchers" kind of story in which the stakes one of the main characters has to fight for are very personal, but on top of that said character is an unreliable one, and shares the stage with the other main character who is his best friend Christian. The tone of the film is extremely paranoid and tense (set up with small details such as Wyatt secretly taping a knife under a table when invited to Christian's apartment) and what is real or not is so well-blurred that the answer eludes the viewer until the very end. It is in that finale however in which the film's nature as a horror/thriller changes to something completely different, revealing what the message itself of the whole work is.Despite this double nature, They Look Like People features some incredibly creepy and unsettling moments and thus should be of interest to those looking strictly for horror elements. It also portrays crippling paranoia rather convincingly, while also delving into everyday problems regarding private lives and alienation. Still its greatest strength becomes apparent, in my opinion, after the film itself ends, and gives the viewer something genuinely important to reflect on.
Not a great indi movie. Its really slow and nothing really happens. Honest, it didn't really do anything for me. Nothing groundbreaking, nothing new, just a waste of my time. I def closed my eyes multiple times because it was soooo slow. Just, watchers beware.
I am very forgiving of bad movies, even if they are far fetched or whatever, they can still manage to be entertaining. But this one was confusing, slow, weird, boring, and disappointing.