Tag: Rob Savage

  • Movie Review: ‘The Boogeyman’

    Sophie Thatcher as Sadie Harper in 20th Century Studios' 'The Boogeyman.'
    Sophie Thatcher as Sadie Harper in 20th Century Studios’ ‘The Boogeyman.’ Photo by Patti Perret. © 2023 20th Century Studios. All Rights Reserved.

    The Boogeyman’, in theaters June 2nd, is just the latest adaptation of the work by prolific horror master Stephen King. And to stand out in an incredibly, and increasingly crowded field, the new movie needed to be something special.

    Long in development (long enough that it was being worked on when 20th Century Fox was still its own studio, only to be cancelled and revived by the now Disney-owned 20th Century Studios), it’s unfortunate to report that this latest attempt at a scary story is somewhat of a dud, with cheap scares that draw laughter more than screams and some big logic issues.

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    What happens in ‘The Boogeyman’?

    ‘The Boogeyman’ is adapted (by ‘A Quiet Place’s Scott Beck and Bryan Woods, with the most recent work from ‘Black Swan’s Mark Heyman) from King’s short story. Originally published in ‘Cavalier’ magazine in 1973, it was later collected into ‘Night Shift’ in 1978.

    Focused on a 1970s take on an alpha male called Lester Billings who has been traumatized by the death of his children at –– according to him –– the hands (or claws) of a terrifying creature, it’s a swift, brutal tale with a twist, one that the movie takes as its basic concept then expands upon.

    Chris Messina plays Dr. Will Harper a therapist in mourning for his wife, who recently died in a car accident. He’s raising daughters Sadie (Sophie Thatcher) and Sawyer (Vivien Lyra Blair).

    Chris Messina as Will Harper in 20th Century Studios' 'The Boogeyman.'
    Chris Messina as Will Harper in 20th Century Studios’ ‘The Boogeyman.’ Photo courtesy of 20th Century Studios. © 2023 20th Century Studios. All Rights Reserved.

    Into Dr. Harper’s office stumbles Lester Billings (David Dastmalchian), who has a horrific story to tell: his children are dead, and while people will think he did it, they were actually slaughtered by a mysterious shadow creature that lurked in the darkness and toyed with him and his family.

    Harper calls the authorities, but Billings appears to kill himself in a secluded closet within the Harper house, traumatizing the good doctor and his daughters further.

    But that’s only the start of their problems –– both Sadie and Sawyer start seeing strange things, with Sawyer convinced she’s being haunted by the same creature that ruined Billings’ life. But is it all just a projection of their grief? And how does Billings’ widow (Marin Ireland) fit in?

    David Dastmalchian as Lester in 20th Century Studios' 'The Boogeyman.'
    David Dastmalchian as Lester in 20th Century Studios’ ‘The Boogeyman.’ Photo courtesy of 20th Century Studios. © 2023 20th Century Studios. All Rights Reserved.

    Who else is in ‘The Boogeyman?

    The cast also includes LisaGay Hamilton, Maddie Nichols, Madison Hu, Lacey Dover and Daniel Hagan.

    Hopes for ‘Host’ director

    A big plus for the film would seem to be the presence of canny British director Rob Savage, who made a splash in 2020 with his creative, entertaining horror movie ‘Host’ in which a zoom seance held between friends during lockdown goes supernaturally, bloodily and mortally wrong.

    Savage followed that up with DASHCAM, the story of a rude, opinionated live-streaming DJ who encounters something awful when she offers a ride in her car to an old woman. Both movies play out entirely on computer (or phone) screens and are chillingly effective uses of that particular horror genre.

    Yet given both the budget and the scope to expand beyond that, Savage here falters, let down by a corny script that has more tropes than it does storyline and more archetypes than it does characters.

    While Savage brings some level of artistry to it all –– tilting camera shots, effective and evocative use of lighting in some scenes and a genuine sense of unease in one early moment –– it’s not enough to save a story that goes to ridiculous lengths to try and evoke some terror.

    Vivien Lyra Blair as Sawyer in 20th Century Studios' 'The Boogeyman.'
    Vivien Lyra Blair as Sawyer in 20th Century Studios’ ‘The Boogeyman.’ Photo courtesy of 20th Century Studios. © 2023 20th Century Studios. All Rights Reserved.

    Messina and his younger co-stars do what they can to breathe life into their characters (Blair, a veteran of ‘Obi-Wan Kenobi’ and ‘Yellowjackets’), Thatcher appropriately acting scared when needed, but it’s all a losing cause in a movie that will evoke giggles more than a desire to find covers to hide beneath.

    The movie also fails to follow its own internal logic; when Sawyer is introduced as the grieving young girl sleeping with a variety of lights on even before she’s haunted and hunted by the titular creature, it makes absolutely no sense that she’d later be content to sit alone in a darkened room with just the meagre light of a TV screen where she’s playing a PlayStation game to make her feel safe.

    Then there are the usual horror movie conventions wheeled out for the 700th time –– the girls screaming and making noise while their father is oblivious in another room, characters noticing creepy black tendrils littering a hallway and stairway but deciding to investigate anyway. And in a scene that could come out of a horror spoof, Sadie is driven by a friend to a particular house she’s investigating, one littered with graffiti calling the occupant a murderer and with a mailbox bent over on its pole by a vandal, only to asked, “is this the house”? Yes, young lady, we’re pretty sure it’s the house .

    It all builds to something increasingly silly and chaotic, characters making stupid decisions when a clear threat is lurking, and the creature itself switching tactics midway through with no discernible reason. And don’t get us started on the therapist who decides that the best way to cure a traumatized child with issues to do with the dark is immediately to plunge them into a darkened room. The movie makes far too many silly choices such as this to be credible.

    Final Thoughts

    There are plenty of great Stephen King adaptations out there, on screens big and small. ‘The Boogeyman’ is, sorry to report, not among them. This is one nightmare that’s more likely to be lurking in the bargain bin than on anyone’s must re-watch list.

    ‘The Boogeyman’ receives 3.5 out of 10 stars.

    'The Boogeyman' opens in theaters on June 2nd.
    ‘The Boogeyman’ opens in theaters on June 2nd.

    Other Movies Similar to ‘The Boogeyman’:

    Buy Tickets: ‘The Boogeyman’ Movie Showtimes

    Buy Chris Messina Movies on Amazon

    ‘The Boogeyman’ is produced by 21 Laps Entertainment, and 20th Century Studios. It is set to release in theaters on June 2nd, 2023.

     

  • David Dastmalchian, Chris Messina, and More Join ‘The Boogeyman’

    David Dastmalchian as Polka-Dot Man in 'Suicide Squad'
    David Dastmalchian as Polka-Dot Man in ‘Suicide Squad’

    As he starts the cameras rolling, director Rob Savage has announced the cast for his next movie. The man behind horror hit ‘Host’ will do his best to scare Chris Messina, Sophie Thatcher, Vivien Lyra Blair, David Dastmalchian, Marin Ireland and Madison Hu for ‘The Boogeyman’.

    It’ll mark a new adaptation of the Stephen King story, which originally appeared in a March 1973 issue of Cavalier magazine before it was collected in his 1978 collection “Night Shift.” One of the titles King has made available to filmmakers under the one-dollar rights agreement, it has been turned into a short and at least one other movie before.

    The tale follows a 16-year-old and her younger sister, still reeling from the death of their mother, who are targeted by a supernatural boogeyman after their father, a psychologist, has an encounter with a desperate patient in their house.

    We don’t yet know who will be playing which role, but Messina should be familiar from movies including ‘Argo’ and ‘Birds of Prey’. Thatcher has been burning up the small screen via work on ‘Yellowjackets’ and ‘The Book of Boba Fett’, while Blair is probably best known for Netflix’s ‘Bird Box’ opposite Sandra Bullock. Ireland was seen in ‘Hell or High Water’ and Martin Scorsese’s ‘The Irishman’, while Dastmalchian should be no stranger to genre fans given his work in last year’s ‘Dune’, the first two ‘Ant-Man’ movies and ‘The Dark Knight’. Hu, finally, was seen in sci-fi movie ‘Voyagers’.

    Chris Messina on HBO's 'Sharp Objects.'
    Chris Messina on HBO’s ‘Sharp Objects.’

    This movie has had to hack its way through the development thorns for a while before it ended up in Savage’s hands. The script’s passed through the likes of ‘Malignant‘s Akela Cooper and ‘A Quiet Place’ duo Scott Beck and Bryan Woods. The current draft is by ‘Black Swan’s Mark Heyman. And on board to produce is prolific filmmaker Shawn Levy, who is supporting the movie via his 21 Laps company.

    Savage is a great choice to direct this, as his previous work has been inventing and, more importantly, chilling. He broke out with 2020’s pandemic -set thriller ‘Host’, which saw a Zoom call go spectacularly, lethally wrong for its participants. It won plenty of acclaim and marked him as a director to watch.

    He’s since followed that up with another low-fi horror, ‘DASHCAM’, which has been playing to great impact at film festivals and will arrive in theaters via Momentum Pictures this summer. Produced by the Blumhouse team, the movie, stars Annie Hardy, Angela Enahoro and Amar Chadha-Patel in the story of a musician on her livestream as her night takes a dangerous turn when she agrees to help a frail elderly woman out of town.

    ‘The Boogeyman’, which arrives via Disney’s 21st Century Studios, will premiere on Hulu next year.

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  • Four Movies from 2020 That Should Be Video Games Immediately

    Four Movies from 2020 That Should Be Video Games Immediately

    This past year, most of us couldn’t go out to the movies with our friends and spend way too much money on overpriced movie food. Instead, we stayed indoors where a lot of people (2.5 BILLION of you world-wide!) played video games! But we also watched movies… just on a smaller screen than we’re used to.

    These two great mediums cross over a lot, either with movies made into games, or games turned in to movies. But let’s focus movies as the starting point – here’s a list of a few movies released in 2020 that would make great video games!

    Birds of Prey (and the Fantabulous Emancipation of One Harley Quinn) (directed by Cathy Yan)

    'Birds of Prey' and Overwatch
    ‘Birds of Prey’ and Overwatch

    When I first saw ‘Birds of Prey’ in theatres, I immediately thought the movie gave off a huge Overwatch vibe. Each main character stands out in both personality, abilities and costume. Anyone who has seen even just art from Overwatch can tell which character is which, and that’s something Birds of Prey did as well. The bright colors and individual powers seen in the movie that would totally rock in an Overwatch-style game. Imagine being able to choose your character and their weapon loadout before a level against Black Mask’s goons, each character having different abilities and playing completely differently than one another! Just beware of arguments about who’s going to play as Harley…
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    Tenet (directed by Christopher Nolan)

    'Tenet' and Metal Gear Solid
    ‘Tenet’ and Metal Gear Solid

    Let’s be real, Nolan is a class act when it comes to cinematic action. Any Nolan film pretty much guarantees impressive visuals and crazy clean action scenes. But what video game director does the same thing? Hideo Kojima, creator of Metal Gear Solid and Death Stranding. Like Nolan, Kojima displays a love for the cinematic spectacle, so just imagine a Kojima-created action title based on Tenet! Or think of the Uncharted series from Naughty Dog, with games that rival any Nolan film with their depth, cinematic set-pieces, and gripping action. And with the capabilities of next-gen consoles, there’s enough processing power to enable the use of controlling in-game, narrative time and even having fights be seamlessly played both forwards and backwards. And you can’t have a ‘Tenet’ video game with time not being a part of it, can you?
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    Onward (directed by Dan Scanlon)

    'Onward' and the Mario Bros.
    ‘Onward’ and the Mario Bros.

    How can we get through this list without a great animated film that would make an even greater platformer? Disney and Pixar constantly hit it out of the park with animated features, and ‘Onward’ is no exception. What also makes ‘Onward’ fit in with other Disney properties is how easily it would translate to a video game! Any gamer watching ‘Onward’ could immediately imagine what an awesome platformer it would make. Think of the Nintendo’s open-world Mario 64, an all-time great. But instead of jumping into pictures or flying to other planets in your hat-shaped spaceship, you’re on an insane road trip with your older brother, on the quest to bring your dad back! Imagine the hub is a 3D map, with you driving that van to each level. Like a Mario game, you would have your slew of collectables, platforming challenges, and each area, from the Manticore’s Tavern to the motorcycle pixies chase, would have its own look and color palette. And of course, you’d also have a game meant for all ages. Besides, who doesn’t love a platformer these days?
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    Host (directed by Rob Savage)

    'Host' and Five Nights at Freddy's
    ‘Host’ and Five Nights at Freddy’s

    It can’t be a long-term quarantine without a horror film that hits incredibly close to home! But ‘Host’ could also capitalize on a very specific game genre. A few years ago, the horror game genre exploded with the popularity of “single-room” horror games. The description pretty much speaks for itself; games that seemingly take place on one screen, in one room. Obviously, you can thank the likes of Five Nights at Freddy’s and Her Story as a result of that boom. And horror fits this genre well, bringing a type of tension that other horror game titles just don’t replicate. ‘Host’ takes place on a single screen with multiple frames, following six friends as they attempt a séance via Zoom. If that was a game story, you would be switching from frame to frame, trying to save your friends as an unknown entity stalks them. And as it’s on a computer, gameplay would include voice and text chat with the other characters, tracking their devices, etc.
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    Lockdown was made a little easier with as the last year gave us a slew of great video games and movies as well. And if you’re spending time with both, you might be seeing how much each medium has taken from the other. Filmmakers are starting to subtly (and not so subtly) take their inspiration from gaming and the genres they follow, and games use film elements even outside specific adaptations. Hopefully, this list puts some movies on your radar you may have missed, and we hope it also encourages you to seek out some games that you maybe haven’t tried yet!