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A gathering of youthful like the web and the cutting edge innovation to such an extent. They don't trust the dread stories of phantoms and different things. When they realize that there is a startling man called the Slender Man, they chose to go to demonstrate that he doesn't really exist. Be that as it may, things turn out badly when one of them is missed and a progression of astonishing occasions start to happen.
Slender Man takes the mythos and basically tries to combine its virality and urban legend aspects into a knock-off of The Ring and Candyman. Emphasis on 'knock-off.'
Deep down beats the heart of a great horror movie, but it's lost in cheap jump scares, bad CGI, and heavy cribbing from "Nightmare on Elm Street" and "The Ring."
A tasteless and inedibly undercooked serving of the internet's stalest Creepypasta, "Slender Man" aspires to be for the YouTube era what "The Ring" was to the last gasps of the VHS generation.
Our heroic would-be victims take too long to like, too long to catch on, and are ultimately forgettable... This monster arrives in theaters promising too little, too late.
There's no fun in this dour exercise and scares are non-existent as the film haphazardly assembles various tropes and repetitive nightmare imagery into 90 minutes of weariness.
In terms of creating a creepy and unsettling movie for those who have been enthralled by the Slender Man character over the last few years, White delivers in that department.
These competent actresses deserve actual characters to play, but Birke's screenplay is as devoid of personality as the faceless cipher stalking its heroes.