Over the course of his career, M. Night Shyamalan has earned
a certain reputation as a filmmaker. He’s the guy with the twist endings, every
goddamned time, right? When his name appears on a film, wondering “what’s the
twist?” is practically a Pavlovian response. So it’s no surprise that his
latest, the psychological horror joint Split, attempts to
pull off a last-minute shock-a-roo.
To be fair, the twist in Split isn’t the one
I scribbled down in a notebook two minutes in and spent the rest of the movie praying
I was wrong about. So that was nice. It is, however, one that’s not
particularly surprising and one that most of the trailers allude to (as does
one of the posters). So, if you don’t want the movie to tip its hand to you, go
in as blind as possible, which is good advice for pretty much every movie.
Three young girls—the popular friends Claire (Haley Lu
Richardson) and Marcia (Jessica Sula), and Casey (Anya Taylor-Joy, The Witch), the weird, sullen, dark-haired loser they’re momentarily
compelled to hang out with—are kidnapped out of a mall parking lot and wake up
trapped in a kind of underground industrial maze. Their abductor, Kevin (James McAvoy), suffers from dissociative identity disorder and hosts no less than 23
distinct personalities. By turns he’s a straight-laced, OCD afflicted possible
molester; a stern, schoolmarm-esque woman; a nine-year-old boy named Hedwig;
and others.
Say what you will about Shyamalan’s narrative proclivities,
but the man is a phenomenal mechanical filmmaker. Even working for the second
consecutive time with low-budget horror factory Blumhouse—last time out they
teamed up for The Visit—Shyamalan’s shot construction; use
of depth of field, light, shadow, and color; and camera movements are measured
and meticulous. He falls into the category of technically marvelous cinematic crafter
who could use parameters to curb some consistent issues on the story front.
Unfortunately, in the case of Split, it’s
all for naught. The set up is relatively simple: the young women are trapped
and in peril. There’s an inherent tension and suspense, with an intriguing
tweak the formula. Flashbacks reveal that Casey has wounds of her own, and the
film briefly attempts to explore the impact of trauma, though it leaves this
thread dangling for both Casey and Kevin. Yet none of this ever amounts to
much.
The side story with psychologist Karen Fletcher (Betty Buckley, Carrie) attempting
to argue that maybe Kevin’s affliction is more akin to superpowers than a
disorder, is largely unnecessary. Split feels rushed and
half-baked, once again using mental illness as a boogeyman, and never hits its
full potential. It’s never that tense, it’s never that suspenseful, it’s never
as shocking as it aims to be or thinks it is. There’s simply never enough to
make the audience throw all-in.
Anya Taylor-Joy is passable, but asked to do little more
than be morose and regularly terrified. Haley Lu Richardson and Jessica Sula
basically exist so Shyamalan’s script can find excuses to show them in their
underwear. Izzie Coffey, who plays five-year-old Casey, is off-kilter and
creepy, and if she were to play the spooky kid in a supernatural horror movie,
I’d watch.
In otherwise mediocre surroundings, James McAvoy stands out.
Watching him bounce from personality to personality—even playing one playing
another—leaves the impression that he might be legitimately unhinged. Perhaps
over the top and affected at times, each personality (we never meet all 23, but
there’s a wide cross section) has its own distinct voice, mannerisms, and quirks.
In many cases, Shyamalan wisely lets a close-up linger as McAvoy slips from one
identity to the next with the twitch of an eye or crease in the corner of his
mouth. Split really serves as a showcase for what he can do.
The rest is meh.
Like with The Visit, some people call
Split a return to form for M. Night Shyamalan. While I don’t
agree, there are glimmers. And I wouldn’t hate to see him continue working in this
low-budget horror realm. His best films—The Sixth Sense,
Unbreakable—always had an edge of exploitation and
grindhouse aesthetics, and that meshes well with these surroundings. Here he has
opportunities to indulge his weirdness and that could,
could, lead to something fantastic. It’s not
Split, but there’s a spark that could catch, and that spark
is the reason I keep watching his movies hoping for a blaze.
[Grade: C]
I'm beginning to see that Anya Taylor Joy is kind of a one-trick pony as far as acting goes.
ReplyDeleteI mostly came here to see if anyone else agrees with the unnecessary role of those two girls. Getting them nearly naked… it was very disturbing. And generally disturbing that all movies always need to show some kind of male dominance and a “helpless” girl. Such a pervert 50 shades of crap.
ReplyDeleteWell done on his acting, though. Let’s hope he’s alright as a person however. Too good!
I’m not sure if the amount of “take of your shirt, take of your skirt” sort of - “you’re a school girl and I am a big man and I will punish you and watch you dance naked for me” kind of thing is something people are truly interested - or it’s something that revives horror and curiosity and once the youth opens the door to the darkness - well… the more of there is out there that is not part of taboo, the more likely that people become edgy, creeps, pervert and confused.
People need control. 80% (or more, or less but definitely the majority of population) were not born to be leaders. Without control… they lose control. Literally.
And the world becomes a sick place.