Los Angeles Times

Horrors — it’s so bad, it’s amusing

- — Noel Murray

There’s an appealing, old-school crumminess to the supernatur­al thriller “The Church,” the kind of micro-budgeted bad movie that may exist only because the filmmaker had access to a location and wrote a story to accommodat­e it. Give credit to writer-director Dom Frank for trying to say something meaningful about callous gentrifica­tion within the context of a quickie horror picture, but good intentions aside, the results are more goofy than scary.

Cult film favorite Bill Moseley stars as Pastor James, the minister at a struggling downtown Philadelph­ia church that’s sitting on valuable land. While debating whether they should take the money from developers to buy and demolish their building, the pastor’s congregati­on and their potential benefactor­s are attacked by the ghosts of past church members, who remind the current generation of their failings.

Frank doesn’t really have the budget — or the cast — to make the horror elements in “The Church” effective. Most of the actors are inexperien­ced and stiff; whenever they’re supposed to be tormented by the paranormal, the special effects meant to illustrate the hauntings are either nonexisten­t or cheesy.

But at least “The Church” is enjoyable to watch … either because of Frank’s baffling choices (why are so many of these devout Christian ladies wearing tight, low-cut blouses?) or because the First Corinthian Baptist Church really is a nice-looking, historic structure.

If nothing else, “The Church” proves something: Better an amusingly terrible, eye-catching horror movie than a slick, nondescrip­t, boring one.

“The Church.” Rated: PG-13, for some violent content and thematic material. Running time: 1 hour, 20 minutes. Playing: Laemmle Monica Film Center, Santa Monica; Laemmle NoHo 7, North Hollywood; Laemmle Playhouse 7, Pasadena.

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