BoogeymanYear: 2005 Director: Stephen T. Kay Written by: Eric Kripke, Juliet Snowden, Stiles White Threat: Boogeyman Weapon of Choice: Darkness |
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Other movies in this series:
None
Rish's Reviews
Does anybody want to see the next theatrical horror film with me? 'Cause I went to
this one with my Irish friend, and I paid for it once again.
Let me know.
The second film from Sam Raimi and Rob Tapert's production company Ghost House,
Boogeyman tells the tale of a young man (Barry Watson) who has been terrified
of dark closets ever since his father was taken by the Boogeyman when he was a boy.
Now, he has to go back to the house it happened in, and put that fear behind hi . . . wait,
why did he have to, exactly?
Yes, it's a premise we've seen a dozen times in the last five years (with an opening annoyingly
similar to They and Darkness
Falls, but I paid to see it again.
Though nearly every other character seemed unbelievable or annoying, Barry Watson's performance
worked for me. He plays a psychologically damaged character (truly, a lot of what
scares him turns out to be only in his mind), and emotes some real dread while not
appearing to be the cowardly man-boy I would be in the situation. The Boogeyman
himself (itself?) remains mostly a mystery. His powers, his motivations, his origins, all
remain unknown. I only wish they had dared do the same with his appearance. Or simply
allowed him to be played by a man in a dark cloak. But ah well.
It was rough being stuck in traffic with my Irish friend afterward, because he is so good
at reviling things and telling me how awful popular cinema is, without ever coming up
with an idea of how things could be better. He asked me, "How do movies like this even
get MADE?" For me, if you have to ask that question, then you have no business going
to scary movies.
And as happened with Freddy Versus
Jason, though I had problems with the movie, I felt like defending it in my review
after hearing the vitriol spewed forth by my immigrant friend. It's no classic, and not
something that people will talk about a decade from now (I imagine that even a year
from now it'll be forgotten), but I'm not going to disparage it.
Shot in New Zealand, there were no rappers in Boogeyman, and for that alone it
should be commended. I'll be honest, I found this to be a pretty good horror film. It was
simple, yeah, but I thought it achieved what it set out to do. True, there was probably
less story here than its 86 minutes necessitated, but it worked more often than it didn't.
Like last month's Hide and Seek, this
had a great first half, filled to overflowing with creepy camera angles, loud noises, and
quick flashes of something disturbing.
To me, the biggest weaknesses of the film were: 1) the ending didn't really satisfy; 2) they
used computer-generated effects for the title character toward the end; and 3) the use
of the "mysteriously spooktastic, hollow-eyed child*" didn't really work.
The film was far from perfect--there were unanswered questions galore, the dialogue was
not great, character motivations were oddly unclear, there were a couple pointless scenes,
and an ending that made no sense--but it wasn't nearly as bad as I've heard people say,
and a far cry from the truly awful genre flicks gorehounds heartilly embrace. And unless
I'm getting weaker in my old age, it was scarier than the majority of horror films, past
or present.
After the movie, my friend said, "Clearly these filmmakers had no idea what makes a horror
film work." When I asked him to clarify, he said, "Look at the horror pictures that really
stay with you and the way they were executed. Look at The Haunting of Hill House
sometime." I felt like arguing that that was a book and there's no film by that title, but
I wouldn't have gotten far. I guess we'll just have to disagree on this one.
Best Scare: Probably for me it was the reveal of the ghost of one of the Boogeyman's
victims. A well-executed scare, in a film with several.
Another Best Scare: I hate to continue to shower praise on such a slight film, but there
was a moment when our hero goes to a children's hospital and finds a girl there who's
hysterically shrieking at something on the ceiling. When he looks, one of the ceiling tiles
has been lifted up an inch or two, exposing the darkness within. Or is it just darkness?
A profoundly disturbing visual completely divorced from shock cuts or loud noise scares.
I'd Recommend It To: Fans of the genre who need no gore, nudity, or big twists in their
Horror.
*Patent pending.
Posted: February 17, 2005
Total Skulls: 26
| Sequel | ||
| Sequel setup | ||
| Rips off earlier film | myriad childhood-terror-must-be-faced-years-later flicks | |
| Horror film showing on TV/in theater in movie | ||
| Future celebrity appears | ||
| Former celebrity appears | Lucy Lawless | |
| Bad title | ||
| Bad premise | ||
| Bad acting | ||
| Bad dialogue | ||
| Bad execution | ||
| MTV Editing | ||
| OTS | ||
| Girl unnecessarily gets naked | ||
| Wanton sex | ||
| Death associated with sex | ||
| Unfulfilled promise of nudity | ||
| Characters forget about threat | ||
| Secluded location | ||
| Power is cut | ||
| Phone lines are cut | ||
| Someone investigates a strange noise | ||
| Someone runs up stairs instead of going out front door | ||
| Camera is the killer | ||
| Victims cower in front of a window/door | ||
| Victim locks self in with killer | ||
| Victim running from killer inexplicably falls | ||
| Toilet stall scene | ||
| Shower/bath scene | ||
| Car stalls or won't start | ||
| Cat jumps out | ||
| Fake scare | ||
| Laughable scare | ||
| Stupid discovery of corpse | ||
| Dream sequence | ||
| Hallucination/Vision | ||
| No one believes only witness | ||
| Crazy, drunk, old man knows the truth | ||
| Warning goes unheeded | ||
| Music detracts from scene | ||
| Death in first five minutes | ||
| x years before/later | ||
| Flashback sequence | ||
| Dark and stormy night | ||
| Killer doesn't stay dead | ||
| Killer wears a mask | ||
| Killer is in closet | ||
| Killer is in car with victim | ||
| Villain is more sympathetic than heroes | ||
| Unscary villain/monster | ||
| Beheading | ||
| Blood fountain | ||
| Blood spatters - camera, wall, etc. | ||
| Poor death effect | ||
| Excessive gore | ||
| No one dies at all | ||
| Virgin survives | ||
| Geek/Nerd survives | ||
| Little kid lamely survives | ||
| Dog/Pet miraculously survives | ||
| Unresolved subplots | ||
| "It was all a dream" ending | ||
| Unbelievably happy ending | ||
| Unbelievably crappy ending | ||
| What the hell? |