Jessabelle
Jessabelle returns to her childhood house in Louisiana after a terrible car accident. Hereby Jessabelle has to confront to a horrify spirit who has been waiting for her return and intending not to let her go this time.
14 April 1956, Dallas, Texas, USA
24 December 1976, Wilmington, North Carolina, USA
19 July 1980, Minneapolis, Minnesota, USA
14 August 1937, Malvern, Arkansas, USA
8 April 1977, Veracruz, Veracruz, Mexico
10 October 1972, Thomasville, Georgia, USA
7 October 1986, Los Angeles, California, USA
5 June 1966, Washington, District of Columbia, USA
April 24, 2015
Believe it or not, this film has great potential. However, everything collapses when it tries to be a horror movie. [full review in Spanish]
February 02, 2015
The film comes off like a nightmare version of Who Do You Think You Are?
November 07, 2014
"Jessabelle" is interesting in some of the small details, and in its strong sense of the Louisiana bayou atmosphere, and then it completely falls apart when it starts being a horror film.
January 12, 2015
An alternately kooky, effectively low-key chiller worth seeing.
November 06, 2014
How are VHS tapes, voodoo and the specter lurking in a house connected? Your impatience for answers is likely to eclipse your trepidation.
November 07, 2014
An ineffective, derivative, and awkwardly executed mash-up of ghost flicks and voodoo movies.
November 06, 2014
One of the nice things about Jessabelle is that it isn't trying too hard.
November 07, 2014
Credit lead Sarah Snook's gentle, sympathetic performance for holding together this atmospheric film, especially during its silly-campy third act.
February 24, 2015
slackjawed Southern Gothic
January 08, 2015
I can't remember the last time I've seen a movie go off the rails as quickly as Jessabelle.
November 07, 2014
As the film racks up incidents and characters and explanations, the mystery dissipates. It's a strange spectacle: a horror film that spends as much time dismantling suspense as it does building it.
January 14, 2015
An honest, gentle performance by Sarah Snook is not enough to recommend this clichéd ghost story.

