Dir.
Drew Goddard / 95 minutes / Cert 15
If
you go down to the woods today, you’ll be sure of a big surprise… no, really,
you will, because this clever little film isn’t quite your usual horror fodder.
Okay,
I’ll hold my hands up and confess that I’m not really your typical consumer of
scary movies. I’m ashamed to say that I’m a big blubbery wuss at heart and
absolutely require all the lights to be on and generally need somebody to grip
my hand tight, tell me when it’s safe to open my eyes again and politely point
out that I should probably consider changing my pants. But I wanted to see The
Cabin in the Woods solely based on the pedigree of Joss Whedon (who, as we all
know, created Buffy and Firefly) and who co-wrote the script along
with writer/director Drew Goddard.
The
premise of the film is almost painfully familiar – a bunch of bland,
one-dimensional impossibly good-looking, impossibly articulate, impossibly witty
teenage students (in this case, “the whore”, “the athlete”, “the scholar”, “the
fool” and that old horror chestnut “the virgin”) plunge gorgeously into the
depths of a deep, dark wood, hoping for a wild weekend of indulgence, but end
up stalked, hunted and really not having all that much of a good time at all.
But, due to their being so impossibly good-looking, articulate and witty, that’s
just swell and we can’t wait to see their heads start rolling and the smug
smiles wiped off their beautiful young faces.
As
it turns out, we’re not the only ones that feel this way, which is where the
film shatters its generic conventions and serves up something a little
different – which yields mixed results. It is revealed early on that others
also get a kick out of seeing sexy youngsters getting ripped to shreds; in this
case The West Wing’s Bradley Whitford
and Six Feet Under’s Richard Jenkins
(both wonderful but arguably miscast here) who play two embittered ageing
technicians who initially provide much comedy (though I do wonder in hindsight if
the comedy slightly undercut the scares slightly). I don’t think it would be
giving too much away to say that these technicians are involved in the gruesome
ordeal that befalls our stunning kids, which proves to be a clever, effective
well-executed idea, but sadly comes at the expense of much of the tension. The ‘fear
of the unknown’ is partially dismantled and for the first half an hour or so, I
was unable to view the perils seriously; imagining that the film was building
up to a cheesy reveal where all the characters had been set-up and ended up
alive and well. I was half right, but I should have had more faith in Whedon,
because it dawned on me eventually that, you know what, this is actually rather
sick and unpleasant.
Therefore,
there is a good deal to enjoy here. Fran Kranz (who played loveable geek Topher
in Joss Whedon’s short-lived and much missed Dollhouse) was standout as a wise-cracking pothead. The comedy is
funny, the satire is thought-provokingly disturbing and the horror at times can
produce a few shivers (it also features lots of obligatory ‘jumpy moments). I’m
just not sure, even with its twists and turns, the genre combination was
completely successful. At times, it felt jarring. That said, it rips up the
rulebook, which I’m all in favour of, and anybody expecting a formulaic narratively
conventional film may end up disappointed. Ultimately, I’m afraid I did, but
for completely different reasons. The ending is a real disappointment. The film
loses it way around about what I shall cryptically refer to as ‘the elevator
scene’ and the final act descends into some kind of fantastical farce; we’re
talking prophecies, rituals and destruction on a global scale that feel
desperate, ridiculous and like they belong in an entirely different film.
If
it weren’t for the conclusion, I would recommend this film. As it is, despite
having its frightening moments (watching one of the girl’s ‘make out’ with a
stuffed wolf is pretty terrifying), I’m afraid this film is more of a
thumbs-down than a thumbs-up from me.
Five
kernels of popcorn out of ten.
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