“I’ve learned that you shouldn’t go through life with a catcher’s mitt on both hands; you need to be able to throw something back.”
Maya Angelou
1928-2014
Oculus (2013)
Rated R
It’s been a good while since a horror film’s caught me in its spell using strong storytelling, empathetic characters and intelligent construction.
The past 10 or so years have seen the horror genre littered with moderately successful (mostly PG-13) fare—The Exorcism of Emily Rose, Insidious 1 and 2, The Conjuring, Sinister—that has given hope to a perpetually gasping genre. These films have filled in gaps between often uninspired, sometimes insipid found-footage subgenre works (the Paranormal Activity sequels, V/H/S), so-called torture porn (the Saw sequels, Hostel, High Tension, the Evil Dead remake), undead features (Zombieland, World War Z, Shaun of the Dead, Stake Land), teen scream films (the Final Destination sequels, the Prom Night and Carrie remakes).
Sure, along the way there have been a few that have aspired to press beyond the status quo—The Descent, The Cabin in the Woods, You’re Next, Plus One, Let the Right One In, The Purge—but frankly these days I’m finding more satisfaction with dramas and thrillers (Headhunters, The Square, the True Detective cable series, Good Neighbors) that have used horror elements for accent than with horror films themselves. Personally, I think those PG-13 successes have as much to do with abysmal alternatives as they do with being genuinely impactful genre efforts.
Oculus arrives at a time when I’ve grown tired of observing my favorite genre on life support. You’ve been waiting for a horror film that engages you as a viewer, right? Here you go. This is a full-blooded horror film that gets the job done right.
The short of it: This film is about a haunted mirror. But really, any piece of household furniture in the service of this script and this director (Mike Flanagan, Absentia) might get the job done.
After years of being separated by tragedy, two siblings reunite to take on the evil forces they believe responsible for the death of their parents. Specifically, Kaylie (Karen Gillan, Guardians of the Galaxy) believes the Damask-like antique mirror brought into their home 11 years ago eventually drove their father to murder their mother and eventually take his own life. Lack of evidence of these supernatural forces led to brother Tim (Brenton Thwaites) taking the blame and spending years in a mental institute. Kaylie has grown into a beautiful and successful antiques dealer who reacquires the mirror with a hidden agenda to seek revenge and clear the family name. Tim, meanwhile, has come to believe most of the details of the tragedy have been reworked by his mind as a coping mechanism and has simply come to accept the sad facts of his deeds.
The past and present stories function on parallel tracks, which work seamlessly even as the two time periods draw ever nearer until the finale, where they actually overlap.
OK, enough of the plot. I’ll leave you to discover its many terrors and surprises. Sound, lighting, editing and acting are all on point, but Oculus uses sure-footed manipulation of perception as its trump card. Because the mirror can manipulate time, space and sound, the film uses this device to manipulate the audience as much as the siblings.
An excellent scene, for example, involves the protagonists not sure which version of themselves is real and which is their mirror illusion. One pair is inside their home facing imminent danger, while the other pair has escaped the house. Should they act to save their endangered selves inside the house, or is it a trick of the mirror to get their outside selves back inside the house? Flanagan has a lot of fun goosing the viewer with such scenes.
Kaylie, thinking she’s fully aware of the mirror’s capabilities, has rigged the house with recording devices, alarms, and has outside contingency plans and even a failsafe. But really once we—and she—discover that the forces behind the mirror can affect and distort video/audio feeds and cell phones, how sure are we of any thing we see or hear?
This is how you build terror: you plot it, you create characters (in two time streams) that we care about, you give us the ground rules and then reveal that those rules can be bent, you use the tried and true tropes of the genre not simply to shock but to enhance story and characters.
Kaylie’s manifest love for her brother when they were kids is contrasted with her present-day disappointment in his willful attempts to deny a devastating past. Meanwhile, her obsession that has only grown since Tim was taken from her threatens to overtake her careful, rational plans. Tim tries to temper his hard-won sanity with his love for his sister; to reach her on some level involves embracing her self-assured belief in the mirror’s evil—that belief once sent him to the psych ward for years.
This film keeps getting compared to The Conjuring. This film is better than The Conjuring.
| Marvin Brown’s Movie Review Archive
What matters in life is not what happens to you but what you remember and how you remember it.
Gabriel García Márquez
1927-2014
My mother is a superhero.
Unmatched in courage, faith, commitment.
I look to her like all mortals look to heroes,
and offer this heartfelt
thank you,
time and again.
For Thressa Mae Brown
Happy birthday, Mom.
Sundance Film Festival 2011*
Park City, Utah
Lights come up
Sundance goes on, but for us it’s time to head back to work and families. In all, we took in 10 screenings and Q&As, an opening ceremony party and a trip up Main Street. We had countless conversations with people like us, people who
seemed like something special, and people who seemed like they were from Mars.
Two things I will take back with me is the memory of the special time I shared with my brother, and the fun of being around so many strangers who, like me, just love the experience of watching films. Good films, bad films, long and short ones. Funny, serious, crazy, romantic and disturbing.
But I’d have to say the most powerful experience of Sundance is that for me it served as a linking tool of my life, tying together the decades between two kids—Marv and Amp—stomping off to the movies like little Siskel and Eberts, and the two married men—Marvin and John—who returned to that era (if only for a few days) and found they’re still a lot like those two kids who loved watching movie magic together.
| Check out our time at Sundance 2011 by clicking here.
Sights and sounds of Sundance
| Check out our time at Sundance 2011 by clicking here.
*Note: Since marvincbrown.com had not been created at the time of the 2011 Sundance Film Festival, I decided to go back and repost these reviews and festival items, which were catalogued elsewhere—mainly because I needed to get these reviews into my archives, but also because it was an enjoyable experience I’d like to share.
Sundance Film Festival 2011*
Park City, Utah
The Main Event
Among Day Three’s assortment of films and stars was a nice diversion to the heart of Park City and the Sundance Film Festival: Main Street. Nestled between the Wasatch Mountains and adorned with quaint and sleek storefronts, the main strip is alive with celebrities, tourists and industry hopefuls.
With mountains peeking over every roof and around every bend, Main Street seems at once an upscale getaway and an inviting hometown. Great shops and eats on every block. Friendly crowds, which is status quo for Park City, never took away from attractive smallness of the Main.
Lunch was had at The Eating Establishment—yes it was—a great restaurant near the top of the ascending Main Street. The breakfast portions are huge and the burgers have to be held with two hands. Interestingly, some store facades are manipulated to hype up the Sundance angle, so you might wonder why your favorite shop suddenly has a new name.
Main Street was great. If you’re going to take a break from screening films, yeah, this will do the trick!
My brother seems surprised to find a Playboy store on the main strip. It’s either new, or one of those Sundance Surprises.
Snow alert: Up until today it’s been clear skies. But today on Main Street, Sundance got its snow. And snow. And more snow. By the time lunch was done, the sidewalk and streets were covered.
OK, on to the shows.
| Movie reviews from Sundance screenings:
Beats, Rhymes & Life: The Travels of a Tribe Called Quest
| Lights come up. Saying goodbye to Park City.
*Note: Since marvincbrown.com had not been created at the time of the 2011 Sundance Film Festival, I decided to go back and repost these reviews and festival items, which were catalogued elsewhere—mainly because I needed to get these reviews into my archives, but also because it was an enjoyable experience I’d like to share.
Sundance Film Festival 2011*
Park City, Utah
Win Win (2011)
Rated R
Reviewed by John Brown
Win Win, directed by Tom McCarthy (The Station Agent, The Visitor) and starring Paul Giamatti (Sideways, American Splendor), was definitely the first movie I saw at Sundance that I think families will enjoy–aside from a little language. Giamatti plays Mike Flaherty, a small-town lawyer who, struggling to get by financially, turns to desperate measures by lying to the court about one of his clients in order to make extra money. While things seem to be going as planned, a kid
related to his client shows up and just happens to be a great wrestler. As Mike tries to use the kid, Kyle (newcomer Alex Shaffer), to turn around the losing high school wrestling team Mike coaches, the lies continue and the laughs begin.
The storyline is lighthearted and funny, which makes you feel for Mike and his situation while laughing at him and his friends as incompetent coaches. Shaffer was actually found through a casting call and is actually a successful high school wrestler, which makes the storyline more believable and his acting just seems like he is being himself as a teenager.
The movie reminds me of the feeling I had watching Little Miss Sunshine (2006) as I laughed and felt sorrow throughout, but much more laughter and in the end walked out with a very happy feeling from a feel-good story. On the Marvin Brown scale: See it.
*Note: Since marvincbrown.com had not been created at the time of the 2011 Sundance Film Festival, I decided to go back and repost these reviews and festival items, which were catalogued elsewhere—mainly because I needed to get these reviews into my archives, but also because it was an enjoyable experience I’d like to share.
Sundance Film Festival 2011*
Park City, Utah
Beats, Rhymes & Life: The Travels of a Tribe Called Quest (2011)
Rated R
Beats, Rhymes & Life: The Travels of a Tribe Called Quest is a documentary of legendary 80s rap group A Tribe Called Quest, directed by actor Michael Rapaport. It’s all here: the humble beginnings, when the talented nobodies hook up; their deserved rise to stardom (heads bobbed as the film ran through the hits); the strain of too many know-it-alls, desires to do solo work, health issues, etc.; the inevitable breakup and reunion; and the where-are-they-now bit.
What Rapaport, surely a fan of Tribe, gets right is the importance of the group and what that meant to other rappers of the day. He smartly zeros in on Tribesman Phif Dawg, the short, round, insecure yet talented co-lead rapper of the group, when another director (most directors) would be tempted to build the film around Q-Tip, the flat-out genius of the group. Phif’s easy-going nature pulls the audience in and humanizes the film, then hooks us when his health issues and clashes with Q-Tip emerge. That Phif was the only Tribe member to show up at the screening was icing on the cake.
Rapaport stumbles, I think, by not showing longer clips of the Tribe’s performances. The talking heads tell us how good they are, the film talks of Tribe’s influence and successes, but it would have been nice to hear why fans still ache for another album.
If you’re interested in the scenario: See it.
UPDATE: Remembering the late Phif Dawg.
*Note: Since marvincbrown.com had not been created at the time of the 2011 Sundance Film Festival, I decided to go back and repost these reviews and festival items, which were catalogued elsewhere—mainly because I needed to get these reviews into my archives, but also because it was an enjoyable experience I’d like to share.
| Marvin Brown’s Movie Review Archive
Sundance Film Festival 2011*
Park City, Utah
Red State (2011)
Rated R
Kevin Smith’s Red State was one of the most controversial films at Sundance 2011. Smith, ever the class clown, entered a packed Eccles Theater describing outside anti-gay protestors as “fans,” and went to town mocking the protestors, even though his film honors their right to protest. If that wasn’t enough, Smith opened bidding on distribution rights for Red State before a crowd of potential studio investors, then, in some kind of rebuke to Hollywood establishment, reversed himself and declared he would distribute the film himself. OK.
The film, talky and juvenile on the front end, takes on religious fundamentalism with an odd mix of horror (done well) and action (done equally well), that ultimately doesn’t live up to its full potential.
What it gets right is fantastic. Five deaths in the film are powerfully depicted and each drew startled reactions from the crowd. It’s a hard thing to do in a horror film, to make that many deaths mean more than a body count. And a scene of blaring trumpets stopped the film in its tracks (in the good sense) and for a moment I was off the map of my cinematic experiences and didn’t know what to think or how to react. It was a moment that skirted greatness, but doesn’t achieve it.
*Note: Since marvincbrown.com had not been created at the time of the 2011 Sundance Film Festival, I decided to go back and repost these reviews and festival items, which were catalogued elsewhere—mainly because I needed to get these reviews into my archives, but also because it was an enjoyable experience I’d like to share.