There's something to be said about Spanish horror. From the bloody giallo masterpieces of Dario Argento and modern efforts like [·Rec], The Devil’s Backbone, and The Orphanage, Spanish directors have managed to distil the essence of fear and bottle it in a horror film – to greater effect than their bigger budget Hollywood counterparts.
Darren Lynn Bousman, one of the directors behind some of the Saw franchise instalments, has aims for this old Spanish scare magic with 11-11-11. It’s a mixture of The Number 23 and John Carpenter’s very harrowing The Prince of Darkness, combining the apocalypse with occult rituals, numerology, and modern day scares.
Surprisingly, the writing for 11-11-11 is decent. Bousman creates a fully developed mythology, serves it up to the audience in piecemeal fashion to heighten the sense of dread that lead to the prerequisite scares. While this sounds commonsensical, you’d be surprised at how half-baked contemporary American horror films are, and how forced their scares feel because the mythology isn’t all that synergistic with the visual horror.
11-11-11 has its moments to be sure, but it may be hampered by a very low budget that seems to have constrained just how scary the film can be.