Rise of the Gargoyles (TV Movie 2009) Poster

(2009 TV Movie)

User Reviews

Review this title
11 Reviews
Sort by:
Filter by Rating:
3/10
Waste of Time
claudio_carvalho10 February 2011
Warning: Spoilers
In Paris, two workers find a hidden chamber while digging the underground of the Saint Jean André Church. They collect the valuable objects in the spot but they are attacked by a creature. Meanwhile, the discredited Professor Jack Randall (Eric Balfour), who wrote a book about Gargoyles rejected by the experts, is encouraged by his friend Carol Beckham (Tanya Clark) to peek the place out. They sneak in the site during the night and while Carol is collecting some artifacts, Jack is recording with his camera. Out of the blue, Jack sees a winged monster coming towards him and he flees from the location with Carol, but breaks his camera. They go to a bar and a huge stone falls over his car. Jack takes a cab to his boarding house and Carol is attacked and beheaded by a Gargoyle at her apartment. On the next morning, Jack identifies Carol's body and becomes the prime suspect of Inspector Gibert (Ifan Huw Dafydd) of several murders. Jack decides to seek out the reporter of a sensationalist newspaper, Nicole Ricard (Caroline Néron), and gives his tape to her cameraman Walsh (Justin Salinger). When Walsh recovers the badly shaped footage, he shows Nicole and they realize that Jack is not crazy and he had seen a Gargoyle indeed in the underground of the church. They decide to return to the church to investigate.

"Rise of the Gargoyles" is a television movie with a non-original story, terrible screenplay, excessive use of clichés, reasonable acting and decent special effects. The greatest problem of the story is the limited budget that makes absurd that anyone in a crowded city like Paris does not see the Gargoyle attack. There are many flaws in the plot; for example, after the disappearance of Inspector Gibert, his investigation seems to be forgotten despite the great number of deaths in Paris. Another example, Jack never grieves the death of Carol. Father Gable using a rifle is also ridiculous. The good point is the gorgeous and talented Tanya Clark that I did not know but has a good, but short performance. My vote is three.

Title (Brazil): "Filhos da Escuridão" ("Sons of the Darkness")
13 out of 20 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
5/10
Similarities
alvarezcomcast23 June 2009
Warning: Spoilers
Cool CGI with this film since it's shot on video. The gargoyle grows a stone skin during daylight as camouflage and is affected by UV or simulated sunlight lamps. This makes it freeze in place but only if sunlight hits it. Otherwise, it reverts back in darkness. This turning to stone motif is exactly like Disney's Gargoyles cartoon (except Disney's stayed stone all day). This creature actually flies and bullets just nick the skin! Also Eric Balfour reminds me of David Naughton in "An American Werewolf in London". A pretty decent film shot entirely in Paris. This beast is vicious and shows no mercy with moves like a flyby decapitation. I like the underground tunnels and rooms of the egg nest (it's a female) and that they are ..."older than Rome".
38 out of 70 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
4/10
not very elaborated... but entertains
nfv235 December 2009
Warning: Spoilers
workers involuntarily release a gargoyle that proceeds to behead those who took her eggs (and some who didn't!).

the animation effects are not bad, as neither is the actor's performance, so all in all it's a solid and watchable film.

there are some absurd situations but the winner is the scene where the policeman is taken by the gargoyle while a criminologist team is processing another victim... though another policeman 2 feet away from them is being showered by blood while calling out for the agent into the air, they keep on with their work, undisturbed and without as much as looking to see what is going on! that's what i call being "in focus" with work!!!
4 out of 7 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
An okay monster movie for a rainy afternoon
jhpstrydom1 January 2011
Delving back into the Sci-fi Channel's man eater series I found RISE OF THE GARGOYLES, an okay monster movie featuring above average acting and a reasonable storyline, my standards were considerably low because this film was directed by Bill Corcoran who also directed another man eater film called VIPERS and believe me if you've seen VIPERS, I won't blame you if you're hesitant about seeing this film.

Fortunatly, this film is a whole lot better than VIPERS, its also not something I would tell the world about but at least its nowhere near as bad as VIPERS, the acting in this film is actually pretty good considering the material and the storyline is done well enough for the film to be entertaining.

The CG effects are tough to judge because during the film the monster is barely seen and when it is seen, you never get a close up look at the monster its always shown from a distance, the one thing you can tell when you eventually see it, is that it is done with CGI.

Overall, RISE OF THE GARGOYLES isn't something I would go out of my way to recommend but if there's nothing else to watch, then I recommend it
15 out of 17 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
3/10
Watchable
michelvega29 October 2015
Not the worst in the genre and not the best. The acting is better and I personally like Eric Balfour. The story is silly but reasonably well written. The visual effects are OK for the few there are. A little bit long at times, somewhat dull toward the end. No surprises. Still, I could stick with it to the end without too much will power. Usually, with this kind of movies, if I do watch them, I can be heavy on the fast forward control on the remote. Those evil glowing eggs are far from subtle. The movie could have worked as well without the glowing. The church looks derelict enough. (Here, I shall refrain from making a comparison with the real organization.) Once you've seen this flick, that's it. No more ever. Not that good.
3 out of 5 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
3/10
Monstrous
omendata12 January 2020
And not in the good way!

I saw the title of this and thought "hey lets give it a go" and saw Eric Balfour's name and that gave me hope.

Sadly not as the movie started it wasone of those ones where they use sounds and shrieks to mask the fact you never actually see anything in the first hour of the movie. But ok that is Scifi Channel standard so I am willing to forgoe the special effects but as soon as the French cop opened his mouth and began speaking in Franglais it was truly a tragic French accent more akin to Renee in Allo Allo and made the film just a joke.

Not withstanding the puerile acting and storyline, characterization, plot and almost everything else just made this an awful exercise in low budget pants horror and even Nick Mancuso looked like he was in it for the pay cheque!

It is not even worth the old film on a wet Sunday afternoon fair!
1 out of 1 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
4/10
Indie-vibe gargoyle flick starts decent but ends lousy
Wuchakk7 November 2017
RELEASED TO TV IN 2009 and directed by Bill Corcoran, "Rise of the Gargoyles" chronicles events in Paris when a brutal gargoyle is released from an inner chamber underneath an ancient church. A discredited Professor who specializes in mythic creatures (Eric Balfour) has a close call with the gargoyle and teams up with others to destroy it and its numerous eggs.

While this has similarities to 2004's "Gargoyle" and 1972's "Gargoyles," it's easily the least of the trio due to: (1.) dubious camera work that seems a notch below the typical Syfy movie; maybe they had crappy equipment, I don't know, (2.) a lousy third act and (3.) a CGI monster that looks more cartoony than the one in the 2004 flick. Furthermore, there are dull parts here & there; and they coulda done better on the female front.

Nevertheless, the European city and catacomb locations (or sets) are great and the ending of the first act features a shocking sequence that is extremely well-done where a woman is chased to the roof of her apartment building and… (I'm not going to give it away). Tanya Clarke really gave it her all in this scene as she truly looks terrified.

THE FILM RUNS 94 minutes and was shot in Bucharest, Romania, & Paris, France (the latter I presume was just used for establishing shots). WRITER: Andy Briggs. ADDITIONAL CAST: Ifan Huw Dafydd plays the skeptical inspector while Caroline Néron & Justin Salinger play tabloid reporter/hacks. Nick Mancuso appears as the over-the-top priest.

GRADE: C/C- (4.5/10)
0 out of 0 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
8/10
Really enjoyable if slightly flawed
kannibalcorpsegrinder22 January 2017
Stuck with writer's block, an American architect in Paris falls victim to a series of incidents around the city that is eventually realized to be a loosened gargoyle resurrected and running loose in the city forcing him and a reporter to find a way of stopping the creature's rampage.

This one was quite an enjoyable and entertaining creature feature. One of the strongest parts here is the fact that there's a lot of fun to be had with the creatures' history-based backstory which is quite well-detailed. Taking full advantage of the strong connections possible with the city's deep connection to these creatures as well as the information given out during the visits to these locations there's some nice work here of this one utilizing the strong history of gargoyles in French culture. Likewise, there's a great connection with the creature here and the absolutely chilling locations found here as the main church where the action takes place is just as good with the crazy architecture coming along to give this a fine Gothic features that are highly chilling alongside the statues and depictions of other historical events that are placed around the catacombs later on which all gives this one a lot to like. That also leads into the strong action scenes which are quite fun and manage to include the usual standard Sci-Fi Channel series of attacks that range from the short, quick attacks as in the opening down in the basement, the different attacks on the lone individuals out on the city streets and the great encounter at the hotel where the chilling run-ins with the stone gargoyles before leading into the actual encounter here all being quite nice examples. In conjunction with the other rather fun longer attacks featured as a part of this as the opening attacks in the church basement, his colleagues encounter with the creature in her apartment where the creature chases her onto the rooftop for a great sequence as well as the great sequence at the TV station where they come face-to-face with it for the first time is quite the overall fun time here. As well, the finale in the catacombs makes for a gloriously fun sequence where they do battle against the creature leading to the numerous situations in the underground as well as up in the main section of the church for a blazing, high-action finale. Along with the great design and some bloody kills, there's a lot to really like here. It does have a few minor flaws here, namely in the fact that there's no real need for the film to go for the doubting authority to the degree it is in here, which really stretches disbelief in the way he sticks to the guilty reasoning despite the evidence about the claw showing that something inhuman is in the city limits which makes the insistence a little questionable so late into the film. As well, there's the traditional flaw present in these films with some really lousy effects for the title creature, for its design is cool but shoddily rendered in the usual Sci-Fi Channel style of flaws. These here are all that's really wrong here.

Rated Unrated/R: Graphic Violence and Language.
2 out of 2 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
7/10
Good rainy afternoon movie
dbborroughs11 October 2009
Warning: Spoilers
Workmen digging in Paris find a hidden passageway that leads to the burial place of a Gargoyle, a great winged monster that turns to stone in daylight. Its up to a professor and a few other people who know the truth to hunt the beast down before it reproduces.

Better than most similar films works thanks to a better script, good effects, a good cast which doesn't seem to be working just for a buck and a director and crew who tried to turn out something other than a TV movie. I really liked this a great deal. I'm a monster nut, I love a good monster movie and will gladly sit down and watch anything with a monster. As a result I've sat through a good number of real turkey's many that premiered on the SyFy network. Most of the films seem to have been cobbled together just to make a buck. here there is none of that. We get real characters, some actors who give good performances and a sense that if the crew cares they may get to make another film. The love shows and you enjoy the movie.

Certainly the plot and all that happens are ultimately rubbish, but at the same time its done well enough that you its 90 odd minutes you suspend your disbelief long enough that you end up hearing a good story.

Worth a look.
23 out of 27 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
8/10
Fun creature feature
Woodyanders2 November 2021
Warning: Spoilers
A gargoyle gets unleashed from its subterranean crypt in Paris, France. It's up to American professor Jack Randall (a solid and likeable performance by Eric Balfour) and a few others to stop the beast before it's too late.

Director Bill Corcoran keeps the enjoyable and engrossing story moving along at a brisk pace, ably crafts a creepy atmosphere, offers a flavorsome evocation of Paris, stages the vicious gargoyle attacks with aplomb, generates a good deal of tension, and delivers some neat bits of gore. The sound acting from the capable cast keeps this movie humming: Carline Neron as feisty reporter Nicole Ricard, Justin Salinger as sarcastic cameraman Walsh, Nick Mancuso as passionate priest Father Gable, Ifan Huw Dafydd as the pesky Inspector Gibert, and Tanya Clarke as the sweet Carol Beckham. The passable CGI monster looks pretty gnarly, too. A cool little flick.
0 out of 0 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
7/10
Rather enjoyable and entertaining to watch for a good weekend show.
nk83505 January 2010
Warning: Spoilers
It quite an entertaining show and the story move on nicely and neatly. Basically, its about an ancient site under a church being accidentally uncovered and release those gargoyles that threatened to breed and to overrun the world. Violent murders took place and somehow a professor become a suspect. Finally, it is up to this professor that teamed up with a reporter and her crew and a priest to stop them. Sure, the special effects (on the gargoyles and the weird flickering eggs) might be a bit of let-down but other than that, i felt the overall package more or less deliver. There are quite a number of different scenes in the show too and ensures that it wont be so monotonous or get boring. Finally there was also your usual hero saving the day stuff and i like the somehow "boring" and "predictable" ending. I would rate it 7 out of 10. Cheers~
9 out of 12 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink

See also

Awards | FAQ | User Ratings | External Reviews | Metacritic Reviews


Recently Viewed