BOTTOM
LINE:
M. Night Shayamalan
regains his directorial feet a little bit with this cautionary tale
of the environment turning on humans, but at the end of the day
this film confirms he's a one-trick pony with an extremely narrow
vision who can't seem to get past his ego by letting someone else
write better scripts for him or to get even half-decent performances
from his cast.
THE
GOOD: We're living
in a world that has become acutely aware of issues such as global
warming and greenhouse gas emissions. With "The Happening",
the latest offering from M. Night Shyamalan, who manages to right
his directorial ship a little bit in this film after some truly
woeful films, puts forward the concept of the environment starting
to attack humans for the way we've all treated it. Fantastic idea,
particularly with the notion that the plants start releasing a chemical
which affects the neurological impulses in human brains, causing
them to harm themselves. Quite a number of scenes in this film are
very chilling; in the opening scenes in New York a group of workers
having a break on a construction site see they're co-workers walking
off the top of the construction site to their deaths on the street.
Or there's the image of people hanging dead from trees when a group
of characters drive through a deserted town. Very eerie and disturbing
(this is Night's first non-PG feature). Aside from the obvious environmental
themes, there's also some exploration of human behaviour and the
way we treat each other in a crisis (echoing scenes from Spielberg's
War Of The Worlds). The film scores points for its topical themes
and warnings, as well as Shyamalan's ability to make the environmental
world come alive and feel threatening, like a predator hunting its
prey in the humans.
THE
BAD: Where do you
begin? Shyamalan clearly has some talent as director because even
in his worst films you can see little flashes of brilliance here and
there, but the problem is he just can't seem to get over his own self-importance.
As a result, this film, just like his last few films, has a brilliant
concept but a screenplay and plot that just meanders from one point
to the next without any real structure (hint Night, get a script writer).
There are a number of scenes in this film that just don't go anywhere
or amount to anything; take Alma's (Zooey Deschanel) secret which
turns out to be she went for dessert with a guy at the office without
telling Elliot (Mark Wahlberg). His response is to make a sarcastic
story about how he deliberately bought cough medicine for no reason
so he could talk to a cute pharmacist. It's dreadful and given the
apocalyptic nature of the story it's completely out of place. Then
there's the whole sequence with the old mad loner at the end. The
idea of someone shutting themselves off to the world to be with nature
works well in the frame work of the idea, but the delivery is absolutely
terrible, particularly as she ends up as one of the victims. The performances
across the board are absolutely terrible, and not because the cast
selected were bad. It's all Shyamalan's misguided (I'm being polite
here) direction. Marky Mark Wahlberg can be good with the right director
but this is hands down one of the most embarrassing performances you're
likely to see, largely due to the high-pitched whiney tone he takes
and the woeful dialogue he's given to deliver. Zooey Deschanel doesn't
fare much better, looking like a deer in headlights for most of the
film. Then there's the title, "The Happening". I don't think
'happening' is a noun, and it makes for some very gimmicky dialogue,
like "is this really happening?" Oh my God!!!! In the end,
this film is an embarrassing mess. Maybe not as bad as his previous
two efforts, but it's a mess any way, begging the question whether
or not Shyamalan really has the humility and self-awareness to listen
to others, and by extension, to have what it takes to be a great director.
Oh well, at least in this film he doesn't inflict on us a pathetic
twist ending to make him look like a clever screenwriter.