Scary Stories to Tell in the Dark
Came out; 2019
Time; 1 hours 48 minutes
Watched: Netflix
Rating; PG-13 for terror/violence, disturbing images, thematic elements, language including racial epithets, and brief sexual references
IMDB Rating; 6.2/10
Caution; Spoiler Alert
Staring.
Zoe Margaret Colletti as Stella Nicholls
Michael Garza as Ramon Morales
Gabriel Rush as Auggie Hilderbrandt
Austin Abrams as Tommy Milner
Dean Norris as Roy Nicholls
Gil Bellows as Chief Turner
Austin Zajur as Chuck Steinbery
Natalie Ganzorn as Ruth Steinberg
Kathleen Pollard as Sarah Bellows
Story Line.
It's 1968 in America. Change is blowing in the wind...but seemingly far removed from the unrest in the cities is the small town of Mill Valley where for generations, the shadow of the Bellows family has loomed large. It is in their mansion on the edge of town that Sarah, a young girl with horrible secrets, turned her tortured life into a series of scary stories, written in a book that has transcended time-stories that have a way of becoming all too real for a group of teenagers who discover Sarah's terrifying tomb
Thoughts.
I wanted to watch this when it came out, I loved these books as a kid and my kids used to love them, it seemed to catch my eye
It was ok, it was more of a teenager movie, but I actually enjoyed the twist they put in to how the stories were written
CAUTION; Major Spoiler Alert
Set
in 1968, it is Halloween in the town of Mill Valley. A young man
named Ramon (Michael Garza) drives into town. Nearby, horror fan
Stella Nicholls (Zoe Coletti) is called by her friends Chuck
Steinberg (Austin Zajur) and Auggie Hilderbrandt (Gabriel Rush) to
play a prank on school bully Tommy Milner (Austin Abrams). The jock
and his buddies are throwing beer bottles at a neighborhood scarecrow
called Harold (Mark Steger). Tommy also takes a swing at Harold with
his bat.
Chuck fishes poop out of the toilet and meets with
his friends to throw it, plus eggs and toilet paper, at Tommy's car
while he is out with Chuck's sister Ruthie (Natalie Ganzhorn) and his
buddies. Tommy ends up driving his car back into a fence. He and his
friends chase after the kids, who run to a drive-in theater and hide
in Ramon's car. The bullies find them and threaten them into getting
out, including Ramon. However, they are driven out of there by
security, but not before Tommy makes a snide comment to Stella about
her mom walking out on her and her father. After the jerks leave,
Stella takes a breath outside before inviting Ramon to join her and
the guys into checking out a haunted house.
The four go to the
home of Sarah Bellows, a figure in an old legend about a disturbed
woman who allegedly poisoned numerous children in the neighborhood.
The kids enter after Ramon picks the locks on the door. Auggie and
Chuck mess around to scare each other, but Chuck ends up hiding in a
closet where he sees the old room turn refurbished, and what appears
to be an old woman with a dog sitting by the bed. Auggie opens the
door to scare Chuck, and everything looks old again. Meanwhile,
Stella and Ramon find Sarah's old book of scary stories. They are
then trapped down there by Tommy and his goons. Ruth tells Tommy to
let them out, but he locks her in there too. After trying to break
out, an unseen force lets them free. They go outside to find that
Ramon's car was vandalized by Tommy, with "wetback" written
on it. Ramon must take it to the shop, and since he was living in his
car, he has nowhere to go. Stella invites him to come over and stay
in the basement.
Tommy drives home drunk and is ordered by his
mother to deliver eggs to the neighbors. On his way, he comes across
Harold and taunts him again. At the same time, Stella reads from
Sarah's book and sees the story "Harold" appearing. As she
reads it, she notices that it mentions Tommy. He ends up walking in a
circle and sees that Harold is no longer on his pike. Tommy soon
realizes he is being followed by Harold. He trips across a rake and
uses it to try and stop Harold, but the scarecrow takes it from him
and impales Tommy with it. As Tommy tries running away, his body
starts to fill up with straw.
In the morning, Ramon brings his
car to the shop, but he is pressed by Chief Turner (Gil Bellows) over
his appearance in town. When he sees what Tommy wrote, Turner
questions him over the supposed fight he got into with him. Ramon
mentions his last name being Rodriguez, and Turner implies he will
investigate him.
Tommy is noted as being missing by Stella's
father Roy (Dean Norris). She goes to investigate with Ramon, and
they find what appears to be Harold wearing Tommy's clothes. Stella
figures that this is Tommy and that the story she read came to life.
She decides to take the book back to the Bellows house to prevent it
from continuing.
When Stella returns home with Ramon, he finds
Sarah's book back on Stella's bookshelf. A new story then begins to
appear, "The Big Toe". This one features Auggie's name, and
it involves him eating a stew containing an appendage, and a
disembodied voice calling out "WHO TOOK MY TOE?" Stella
calls Auggie to warn him, but he ends up eating the stew, and the Big
Toe woman (Javier Botet) starts stalking him. Auggie runs to hide in
his room under his bed, but as he thinks he is safe, Big Toe pulls
him under the bed and reveals her hideous face before making him
disappear. Stella and Ramon show up too late and see the claw marks
under Auggie's bed to have their fears confirmed.
Stella tells
Chuck and Ruth that Auggie is gone and that it's because of the book.
Chuck suggests they take it to the police, but Ramon doesn't want to
get involved with them since they might think he had something to do
with both Auggie and Tommy disappearing, as there is now a search
party going out for the latter. The trio try to burn the book, but it
doesn't work.
The friends go to the Mill Valley Gazette to dig
up any old information on Sarah. They find articles about a woman
named Lulu Baptiste, who worked for the Bellows family but was fired
after Sarah hung herself, and it was believed that Lulu was teaching
Sarah black magic. The book then starts to write another story, "The
Red Spot". This one is about Ruthie, who got bitten by a spider
while trapped in the Bellows house. She is set to go on stage for a
performance of "Bye Bye Birdie", but the spider bite on her
cheek starts to get worse. She goes to the bathroom to check on it,
and hears a voice calling her name. A spider leg then pokes out of
Ruth's cheek, before a whole swarm of spiders start crawling out and
biting her. Stella, Chuck, and Ramon run to the school in time to
catch Ruth and throw water on her to repel the spiders. She is
covered in bites and crying to get the spiders off. She is later
taken to the hospital.
The friends track down the now elderly
and blind Lulu (Lorraine Toussaint) to ask what happened with her and
Sarah, hoping to find a way to undo what has been going on. She says
there was no magic involved, but the presence of the book overwhelms
Lulu.
The trio then heads to a hospital that they think has
records of the Bellows family. Chuck mentions having a dream about
seeing a pale woman in a red room, telling him, "This is an evil
place. Run while you still can." The kids sneak in and head to
find whatever documents they can. Stella and Ramon come across a room
with old recordings from Sarah as she received electroshock treatment
from her brother Ephraim. They hear the voice of Sarah (Kathleen
Pollard), who, as it turns out, was innocent and never poisoned the
children, but it was her family's fault for tainting the water
supply, and they tortured her and framed her to cover up their
secrets. She then appears to be reciting the new story being written,
"The Dream." Orderlies find Chuck as he snuck in, and the
alarm goes off, making everything go red. He then sees the Pale Lady
(also Mark Steger), who appears grotesquely overweight and has a
horrifying grin etched on her face. No matter where Chuck runs, the
Pale Lady keeps coming closer and closer until he cannot escape and
she absorbs Chuck. Stella and Ramon find out too late that he is
gone, and they are kicked out of the hospital.
Stella calls
her father from the precinct. She fears that she is going to die
because of the book, and she tells him not to think that she is
running away. Roy tells her to not think that it was ever her fault
that her mother left. Turner then interrogates Stella and Ramon about
the disappearances of their friends. They try to explain that it's
because of the book, but it is too far-fetched for Turner to believe.
He also brings up that Ramon's real last name is Morales and that he
dodged the draft. The two are placed in adjacent cells, and Ramon
explains that his brother was drafted to Vietnam and was killed out
there, so he got away after learning he was to be drafted. Soon, the
next story is being written, and a monster called the Jangly Man
(Troy James) emerges. He breaks Turner's neck and tosses his body
toward Stella's cell. She gets the keys, but the Jangly Man attempts
to get Ramon since his name was in the book, and he knows of the
Jangly man from an old story his father told him. Stella frees them
both from the cell, and they realize they must run to the Bellows
house to put an end to this. Jangly Man chases after them as they
take Turner's car, but Ramon manages to lose him by crashing the car
and pinning Jangly Man to a train.
Stella and Ramon run to the
Bellows house, where they get separated as Jangly Man goes for Ramon.
Stella is pulled into another room by the ghosts of the Bellows
family. She comes face-to-face with Sarah's ghost, who is getting
ready to trap Stella in her own story. However, Stella hears Ramon's
voice telling her to tell Sarah the truth. Stella stands up to the
ghost and says that she knows that her family killed the children and
framed her, but she is becoming as big of a monster as they were by
haunting and taking her friends. Stella promises Sarah that she will
tell the truth about her. Sarah gives Stella a quill and tells her to
write Sarah's story in her own blood. Stella writes the truth, and
Sarah's ghost wails before crossing over. The Jangly Man goes down as
the terror appears to stop. Stella and Ramon run to embrace each
other.
Later on, Ramon willingly goes to be drafted in
Vietnam. He says farewell to Stella, who gives him a letter and
promises to write to him. He reads it on the bus, and it's a letter
from her asking him to come home soon.
Stella writes a story
in the school paper about the truth over the Bellows family history.
While not many people are listening, she is determined to let the
real story be known. She then goes with Roy, and the recovered Ruth,
as they plan to use Sarah's book to find a way to bring back Auggie
and Chuck.
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