Young Alex (Gabrielle Haugh) has returned to the old family home – the place
where her mother hanged herself in front of her when she was a child, no less –
to care for her grandmother Anna (Lin Shaye) who is suffering from dementia of
increasing severity. One night, when she is visited by her best friend Miles
(Grayson Daniel) – of course he’s secretly in love with her, this is a
movie after all and the movie rule book says all male best friends of women are
pining for them – she stumbles upon a very creepypasta little game/ritual hidden
away in a box.
The “game” evokes an entity known as the Midnight Man (Kyle Strauts) who is
allergic to salt, lit candles, and fair play, and who supposedly likes to kill
people with their greatest fears. Of course, Alex and Miles start playing, and
of course, the Midnight Man turns out to be very real indeed, so our heroes will
have to fight for their lives – as well as listen to a Robert Englund shaped
exposition dispenser – until the Midnight Man’s allotted time span in the real
world is over.
Travis Z’s The Midnight Man has quite a few obvious flaws, mostly
concerning its pacing and plot logic. Englund’s exposition dump for example
brings the film to a screeching halt at the worst possible moment, the
characters just shrugging off the plight of a trapped friend a few rooms off
because they just need to listen to that sweet, sweet exposition.
During this, Englund repeatedly emphasizes that time is of the essence – while
standing around, talking at the characters. Then there is that whole business
about the Midnight Man using a person’s greatest fears against them: apparently
“I killed my pet rabbit as a child” counts as a fear in the Midnight Man rule
book, as does disliking pain. On the other hand, the pet rabbit business enables
the film to let its inner freak flag fly and put a very fake looking rabbit head
on the Midnight Man, which sits nicely between the goofily absurd and the
somewhat disturbing, a position where our antagonist’s usual outfit rests as
well.
Generally, while the film’s story is sparse and its dramatic arc is not at
all smooth, there’s a sometimes very effective mood of dread and the strange
running through it, the director not only using his experience as a production
designer – as well as a lot of clever lighting tricks - to create a wonderfully
creepy house for the characters to stumble and creep through but also
demonstrating a nicely developed sense for strange horror sequences that
reminded me a little of a more down to Earth Nightmare on Elm Street.
The film’s narrative may at times be rather rough in its attempts to mix
classical gothic revival tropes like Alex’s family history with supernatural
slasher tropes and creepypasta style horror but its attempt to do so is
certainly imaginative and enjoyable to watch if one can just ignore silly things
like plot logic. Fortunately, I can.
The film’s good side is further enhanced by Lin Shaye’s performance. What
starts as a relatively realistic (and therefore rather sad) portrayal of
dementia evolves into the craziness of your classic psycho-biddy, combining
outright scenery-chewing with enough subtlety and actual evil for it to be
entertaining as well as creepy. The young actors are solid enough, Englund does
his expository duty with his usual professionalism, even provides his functional
role with a bit of human warmth, and Strauts does the physical part of his
Midnight Man duty (clearly enhanced, and I really mean enhanced, by CGI) with
aplomb. I would have preferred the MM to not have been quite as talkative as he
turned out to be but that might just be my general love for mute (well, moaning,
weeping, gibbering and meeping are okay) supernatural evil and dislike for
capital-E Evil that feels the need to add bad punning to its sins.
So, even though I have no problem at all seeing why The Midnight Man
isn’t exactly well loved, I had rather a great time with it.
Wednesday, July 25, 2018
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment