Tag: jeff-wadlow

  • Movie Review: ‘Imaginary’

    Pyper Braun as Alice jn 'Imaginary.'
    Pyper Braun as Alice jn ‘Imaginary.’ Photo Credit: Parrish Lewis.

    Opening in theaters on March 8th, ‘Imaginary’ is the latest horror from the increasingly prolific –– and increasingly hit-or-miss Blumhouse team. Sadly, the story of a long-dormant childhood fear factor coming back to haunt a woman and her family is more firmly in the “miss” category.

    While imaginary friends are clearly on filmmakers’ minds at the moment between this and John Krasinski’s upcoming, much more family-orientated ‘IF’, the new attempt at finding terror in the mundane-meets-the-metaphysical is more disappointing than most of Blumhouse’s recent efforts.

    Related Article: Allison Williams Talks ‘M3GAN’ and working with director Gerard Johnstone

    Does ‘Imaginary’ Dream Up Some Real Terror?

    DeWanda Wise as Jessica in 'Imaginary.'
    DeWanda Wise as Jessica in ‘Imaginary.’ Photo Credit: Parrish Lewis.

    How much you appreciate ‘Imaginary’ might depend on your tolerance for seemingly endless passages of exposition delivered in the middle of scenes, effectively grinding the movie to a halt so someone can spout off about spirits and their filtering through different cultures.

    It’s either that or some fairly rote frights blended awkwardly with mawkish bonding as a step-family learns to come together via the power of, er, a terrifying bear.

    Script and Direction

    DeWanda Wise as Jessica and Director Jeff Wadlow on the set of 'Imaginary.'
    (L to R) DeWanda Wise as Jessica and Director Jeff Wadlow on the set of ‘Imaginary.’ Photo Credit: Parrish Lewis.

    The script for this new horror movie is unfortunately one of its weakest points. Cranked out by Greg Erb and Jason Oremland alongside the film’s director, Jeff Wadlow, it’s an uneasy mish-mash of predictable plot points and even less surprising jump scares.

    And the tone is all over the place; while it can be a good thing to spend some time setting up your characters, ‘Imaginary’ doesn’t boast particularly original examples in the first place, its dynamic built on over-used fractiousness between the members of this blended family. There’s plenty of scope for terror in the idea of danger lurking from someone’s past and haunting their present, but the concepts here have been brought to screens several times before in more original and satisfying fashion.

    Even worse, there are glaring signposts all over the place, from the main character’s job (a children’s book writer/illustrator obsessed with a spider character and terrorized by a giant arachnid in her nightmares) to scenes of a child psychologist interviewing our heroine’s younger step daughter, only for things to take a disturbing turn.

    There are ways to combine obvious elements in a way that feels fresh (see, for example, the ‘Spider-Verse’ movies, which take the endlessly-exploited Spider-Man origin and find new things to say, layering on extra emotion and meaning), but ‘Imaginary’ is content to stay simmering at a lukewarm pace and level of thoughtfulness.

    Wadlow, meanwhile does himself and his cast no favors on the directing front. This is largely blandly shot, and while he looks to get experimental in the final act, even that is embarrassingly amateurish, a sort of Tim Burton-lite funhouse that even by Blumhouse’s tightly budgeted standards looks cheap and humiliating. Sure, it’s meant to be grown from children’s imagination, but did it need to look so shockingly low rent? And the less said about the final forms of the creatures, the better.

    Performances

    DeWanda Wise as Jessica and Pyper Braun as Alice in 'Imaginary.'
    (L to R) DeWanda Wise as Jessica and Pyper Braun as Alice in ‘Imaginary.’ Photo Credit: Parrish Lewis.

    Playing our main protagonist, conflicted stepmother Jessica, DeWanda Wise struggles with breathing life into such a blandly predictable character. She’s got the past emotional baggage, the distant, ailing father (if you don’t guess why he’s in the condition he is from the moment you meet him, shame on you), and entirely uninspiring issues with her current family. Wise is watchable, but even she can’t save this role.

    As her youngest step-kid Alice, Pyper Braun does a serviceable enough job, working best when she’s channeling ‘The Exorcist’ for a “conversation” with seemingly haunted bear Chauncey in front of Dr. Soto (Veronica Falcón). A bundle of her own neuroses, Alice is a perfectly fine foil for the main threat, but even she’s mostly called upon to be sweet, pouty or scared in entirely basic fashion.

    The less said about her teen sister Taylor, played by Taegen Burns, the better. It’s no fault of Burns, who is burdened with a completely cliché rebellious type who boringly wants to spend time with the hunky teenage boy next door or shout at Jessica that she’s not her real mom and shouldn’t look to replace her in Alice’s affections. There is something interesting to be mined in the portrayal of a young woman forced to grow up quicker than expected and care for her sister, but ‘Imaginary’ does so in utterly facile fashion.

    Everyone else in the film is either an exposition spout or so paper thin (Tom Payne’s Max, who a musician who leaves to go on tour so quickly he might as well not be in the movie) that they barely register.

    And Chauncey, the totem for the title’s not-so-imaginary being? He won’t replace M3GAN in anyone’s list of great horror characters.

    Final Thoughts

    Pyper Braun as Alice in 'Imaginary.'
    Pyper Braun as Alice in ‘Imaginary.’ Photo Credit: Parrish Lewis.

    Unlikely to end up on anyone’s list of best horror movies (though at least it has the completely disposable, low-rent likes of ‘Winnie-the-Pooh: Blood and Honey’ to compare favorably against in the pantheon of scare bears), ‘Imaginary’ has a couple of decent moments, but neither is enough to rescue it from coming across as a bargain bin horror.

    Wadlow has made better horror before ‘Cry Wolf; for one, and even ‘Truth or Dare’ but this represents him on autopilot. Thinking it’ll make for a solid night of terror at the movies? You’re imagining things.

    ‘Imaginary’ receives 5 out of 10 stars.

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    What’s the Story of ‘Imaginary’?

    When Jessica (DeWanda Wise) returns to her childhood home with her family, she finds her old teddy bear, Chauncey, and sees that her youngest stepdaughter Alice (Pyper Braun) has grown attached to it.

    After Alice’s behavior becomes concerning, and the games that she and Chauncey play turn increasingly sinister, Jessica starts realizing that Chauncey is much more than the stuffed bear she believed him to be for all those years…

    Who Else is in ‘Imaginary’?

    Wise and Braun are joined in the movie by Tom Payne, Betty Buckley, Taegen Burns, Matthew Sato, Verónica Falcón and Dane DiLiegro (who voices Chauncey).

    Pyper Braun as Alice jn 'Imaginary.'
    Pyper Braun as Alice jn ‘Imaginary.’ Photo Credit: Parrish Lewis.

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  • ‘Magic 8 Ball’ Movie Moving Forward With Director Jeff Wadlow

    ‘Magic 8 Ball’ Movie Moving Forward With Director Jeff Wadlow

    Mattel Magic 8 Ball
    Mattel

    Signs point to yes for “Magic 8 Ball.”

    The upcoming movie based on the retro toy is making progress. Mattel Films has teamed up with Blumhouse Productions, and director Jeff Wadlow has boarded the project, Deadline reports. Wadlow is also set to write the script with Jillian Jacobs and Chris Roach, both of whom he collaborated with on Blumhouse’s “Truth or Dare.”

    Mattel Films’ Robbie Brenner said in a statement Monday that there is “untapped potential for storytelling” when it comes to the Magic 8 Ball. He shared his confidence in the team they’ve put together, saying that “there are no partners better suited to tell the Magic 8 Ball story” with the studio than Wadlow and Blumhouse. Meanwhile, Blumhouse’s Jason Blum said that they look forward to “playing against expectations” as they bring the toy to life.

    Wadlow’s other credits include writing and directing films like “True Memoirs of an International Assassin,” ” Kick-Ass 2,” and more. He’s also writing and directing the upcoming “Fantasy Island.” We’d say the outlook is good for the upcoming “Magic 8 Ball.”

    The film was previously in development nine years ago, as Deadline reports. This time, there seems to be more momentum. It is one of six projects Mattel Films has in the works, all based on its popular toys.

    [via: Deadline]

  • ‘Ant-Man’ Star Michael Pena to Play Mr. Roarke in ‘Fantasy Island’

    ‘Ant-Man’ Star Michael Pena to Play Mr. Roarke in ‘Fantasy Island’

    Marvel Studios

    A Marvel breakout is set to play an iconic television character: Michael Pena will star as Mr. Roarke in the upcoming big screen adaptation of classic series “Fantasy Island.”

    Deadline has the scoop that Pena — who won over MCU fans as scene-stealer Luis in “Ant-Man,” and this year’s sequel, “Ant-Man and the Wasp” — will take on the starring role in the flick. The part was originated by the late Ricardo Montalban on the ABC series, which launched in 1978 and featured the mysterious Mr. Roarke granting the outlandish wishes of visitors to the titular locale, for a hefty fee.

    Those fantasies rarely played out as planned, often with disastrous results, and it appears that filmmakers will be leaning into that aspect of the series with this new take. Horror master Jason Blum will be co-producing the film, and director Jeff Wadlow is re-teaming with his “Truth or Dare” screenwriters Chris Roach and Jillian Jacobs for the project.

    No word yet on when production may start, or who will be playing the equally-iconic role of Mr. Roarke’s sidekick, Tattoo (originated by actor Hervé Villechaize, the subject of an upcoming HBO biopic starring Peter Dinklage). Stay tuned.

    [via: Deadline]

  • A ‘Fantasy Island’ Movie Is Coming From ‘Truth or Dare’ Director

    A ‘Fantasy Island’ Movie Is Coming From ‘Truth or Dare’ Director

    Fantasy Island
    ABC

    Welcome to Fantasy Island! Because everything else has already been remade and it was next on the list.

    Fantasy Island” — the TV series that ran on ABC from 1977-1984, and spawned “De plane! De plane!” — is being turned into a movie.

    According to Deadline, Blumhouse (“Halloween,” “Glass”) is co-financing the film with Sony, with Jeff Wadlow directing and co-writing the script. That will mark a re-team of Wadlow and Blumhouse after “Truth Or Dare.”

    The TV series starred Ricardo Montalban as Mr. Roarke, overseer of a magical island attracting visitors who hope to live out their wildest fantasies. Hervé Villechaize co-starred as Mr. Roarke’s sidekick Tattoo.

    So it’s another remake. But it has been a long time since the TV show (and two TV movies) aired, and the premise is interesting enough to be ripe for a modern feature-length re-interpretation.

    This could really work. Or it could suck. We’ll see. Casting will be a big factor, in addition to the direction they decide to take with the plot and tone. Horror? Horror-comedy? It’s Blumhouse, so you have to expect dark indie horror is ahead.

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