Metascore
12

Overwhelming dislike - based on 7 Critics What's this?

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  • Summary: Wendy (Anne Heche), her husband Dan (James Tupper) and their kids have just moved to the small town of Stull, Kansas, where Dan is the new pastor. But in this sleepy community of friendly neighbors, a horrific series of occurrences awaits them: Their teenage daughter (Rebekah Brandes) is being tormented by grisly visions. Her younger sister (Jennifer Stone) has been marked for a depraved ritual. And deep within the heartland darkness, one of The Seven Gates Of Hell demands the blood of the innocent to unleash the creatures of the damned. Expand
Score distribution:
  1. Positive: 0 out of 7
  2. Mixed: 0 out of 7
  3. Negative: 7 out of 7
  1. Reviewed by: Scott Foundas
    Oct 5, 2013
    30
    Features fewer small-town scares than a rerun of “Dawson’s Creek” and more wooden acting than a marionette theater. Memo to Rob Zombie: Don’t fear the competition.
  2. Reviewed by: Nick Schager
    Oct 1, 2013
    30
    It’s stale B-movie rubbish of a barely watchable sort, albeit slightly more depressing than many of its genre compatriots.
  3. Reviewed by: Sara Stewart
    Oct 3, 2013
    25
    Director Anthony Leonardi, in his feature debut, litters the film with inconsistencies.
  4. Reviewed by: Andy Webster
    Oct 3, 2013
    20
    The familiar special effects are not the most disappointing element here. It’s the squandering of the talented Ms. Heche, who is given top billing but almost nothing to do.
  5. Reviewed by: Frank Scheck
    Oct 7, 2013
    20
    More scares are induced by the creepy soundtrack composed by Slash and Nicholas O'Toole than by the perfunctory special effects.
  6. Reviewed by: Rob Staeger
    Oct 1, 2013
    0
    Any sensible person would gun it right out of the theater.
  7. Reviewed by: Betsy Sharkey
    Oct 3, 2013
    0
    For cheap thrills, Nothing Left to Fear is true to its title. Director Anthony Leonardi III and writer Jonathan Mills have let not one scary moment on screen.