The Reaping Comments

  • Adeline 2022-04-22 07:01:42

    Very dramatic, very...

  • Edythe 2022-04-22 07:01:42

    I don't understand that religious horror movies are always...

  • Nico 2022-04-22 07:01:42

    Swank looks really...

  • Lacey 2022-04-21 09:02:51

    The content is nothing, but the 10 natural disasters that Moses showed in "Exodus" were expressed with special effects, and this is the best version so...

  • Letha 2022-04-21 09:02:51

    I don't understand...

  • Elenora 2022-04-21 09:02:51

    After watching it for a long time, I knew it was a science fiction movie, but in the end I didn't understand the last religious relationship, whether the child she was carrying was bad or good. The town was scary, especially the kids skating through...

  • Lilyan 2022-04-21 09:02:51

    Solo performance by...

  • Bette 2022-04-21 09:02:51

    A little boring second-rate horror movie, my childhood...

  • Tressie 2022-04-21 09:02:51

    Daredevil stories, religious disasters are Hollywood gimmicks...

  • Trycia 2022-04-21 09:02:51

    The Ten Disasters is a decent one. The special effects in 2007 are more exaggerated than those in Europe and America after that. It's a feast of insects. It's really disgusting. What I don't like is that there are too many hallucinatory...

Extended Reading
  • Lauriane 2022-01-06 08:02:07

    retribution!

    It provokes God, and he is not a fuel-efficient lamp! ! We always say that "good is rewarded for good, evil is rewarded for evil, and it is not that the time is not yet to report". Everyone believes that God has its own arrangements, but when the naive arrangements are made, people are panicked and...

  • Elmore 2022-01-06 08:02:07

    Is the devil? Is it an angel?

    After Silent Hill, I haven't seen such an excellent movie.

    If the Da Vinci Code is a combination of science and religion, then this movie is a perfect interpretation of the teachings of Christianity. The ten punishments, the ancient signs of apocalypse have occurred in the present, in order to...

The Reaping quotes

  • Katherine Winter: In 1400 B.C., a group of nervous Egyptians saw the Nile turn red. But what they thought was blood was actually an algae bloom which killed the fish, which prior to that had been living off the eggs of frogs. Those uneaten eggs turned into record numbers of baby frogs who subsequently fled to the land and died. Their little rotting frog bodies attracted lice and flies. The lice carried the bluetongue virus, which killed 70% of Egypt's livestock. The flies carried glanders, a bacterial infection which in humans causes boils. Soon afterwards, the Nile River Valley was hit with a three-day sandstorm otherwise known as the plague of darkness. During the sandstorm, intense heat can combine with an approaching cold front to create not only hail, but also electrical storms which would have looked to the ancient Egyptians like fire from the sky. The subsequent wind would have blown the Ethiopian locust population off course and right into downtown Cairo. Hail is wet, locusts leave droppings, spread both on grain, and you have got mycotoxins. Dinnertime in ancient Egypt meant the first-born child got the biggest portion, which in this case, meant he ate the most toxins, so he died. Ten plagues. Ten scientific explanations.

  • Doug Blackwell: [about dead fish] When did this start?

    Sheriff Cade: This morning. Bubbled up like farts in a bathtub.