from wiki:
Despite this the film did garner a few positive reviews.
Fangoria praises the film's imaginative use of colour: "the director and his visual team bathe the film in deep blues and reds, a welcome departure from the dirty green, sodium-lit palette of similarly themed horror fare, and the end result is simply a beautiful, eye-popping visual treat, so stylized that one can’t help recalling Argento’s approach to
Suspiria."
[10] The Radio Times also alluded to the director "recalling the style of Dario Argento" in a "twisty, perversely fascinating psycho thriller."
[11] Horror movie website
Bloody Disgusting gave the film a glowing review and suggested that "Lohan's continual issues with drugs/alcohol/DUI’s/rehab/on-set bitchiness" were part of a "whirlwind of media frenzy" which was unnecessary and "irrelevant to the movie". The film itself was "a more-than-pleasant surprise, well-filmed, well-acted, especially by Lohan herself, and a surprisingly intriguing and gruesome little thriller."
[12] And according to "The Movie Boy": "Lohan's
stripteases and pole-swinging theatrics at the gentleman's club are notable for being genuinely steamy, sleekly shot and choreographed".
[13]
and
Chris Sivertson is a
filmmaker best known as the director of the
2007 horror film I Know Who Killed Me, starring
Lindsay Lohan. The film was not well-received by critics
[1] and it won several
Golden Raspberry Awards.
[2] However, the film subsequently developed a cult following, with screenings at the Los Angeles Silent Movie Theater and the NuArt, and has been favorably compared by
Boston Globe critic
Ty Burr to Brian de Palma's
Sisters and
Body Double as well as the works of
David Lynch.
[3] Other films Sivertson has written and produced include
The Lost (2005, also director), based on the popular novel by
Jack Ketchum, and
Wicked Lake (2008).