Jeruzalem
The horrific story began with many exciting events by Sarah and Rachel, two American girls on their way to Jerusalem. Their journey may turn into a nightmare for the entire city. Both were making an enjoyable trip but the fun was interrupted when the gate of hell opened and the crazy demonic creatures began to kill lives and turn all those victims into strange monsters.
15 January 1970, Haifa, Israel
22 July 1989, Israel
January 28, 2016
A pale copy of the [REC] movies with minimal invention and a poorly defined mythology.January 22, 2016
Jeruzalem is this gloriously morbid and dreadfully delicious blend of [Rec] and As Above, So Below.January 21, 2016
Yes, this is yet another found-footage horror film shot on a shoestring, but there's no need to despair since JeruZalem is a wildly entertaining, often unbearably intense and occasionally drawer-filling experience.February 20, 2016
The cool creature design and authentic first-person cinematography/lighting later on will have you forgiving any early shortcomings.January 26, 2016
As impressive as the Old City locations can be, one narrow alleyway looks much like another when the Paz brothers' camera is bouncing to and fro. Not much substance is buried beneath the irritating style.July 08, 2016
The movie is saved from being too formulaic by two elements. The first is Yael Grobglas... The second element is the tongue-in-cheek aspect of the movie.January 22, 2016
The niftily claustrophobic use of actual Jerusalem locations offers a nice holiday from the more familiar backdrops favored by the POV genre.January 28, 2016
The more desperate the characters' flight becomes, the less interesting the movie grows.February 04, 2016
There are a few nice moments in the film; I do like how Sarah's wearable tech tries to perform facial recognition on the undead. But by the end of JeruZalem, it's clear the glasses are the smartest thing in the movie.January 28, 2016
If not for its setting, the Israeli horror film Jeruzalem would be just another video verite, found-footage, would-be scarefest with little to make it unique...There's just not much scare there.January 21, 2016
The movie's occasional stabs at political commentary never quite pay off. Nor can the writer-directors, brothers Yoav and Doron Paz, fully sustain the film's novelty into the second half, when the script reverts to timeless, tired monster-movie tropes.January 29, 2016
Old Jerusalem isn't often glimpsed on the big screen, though it's a shame that, in this case, it simply serves as the backdrop to some rampaging CGI demons and half-baked theology about the gates of hell.