It
is good to know that there are cerebral films being made that require
nil in terms of special effects, gore, or action. That statement is more
of a comment about the principle that we can film 90 minutes of people
talking because if you do not have gore and actions, you have to present
a brilliant story. Brilliance and Melissa Joan Hart are two terms that
will never star in a film together. (Finding out how proud she was to be
involved with "God's Not Dead 2" solidifies that as fact.)
Nine
people have been kidnapped by a rogue, taser-toting Blue Man Group
member. They all regain consciousness in a windowless room, each
handcuffed to a pole. The pissed off Smurf introduces them to his game
and provides the rules.
The
nine victims have 10 minutes to determine the reason why they have been
imprisoned together. If they figure it out, they will all go free and
their captor will confess his crimes to the police. Failure to determine
the reason will result in one of them being killed, but they will
receive another 10 minutes to find out what they have in common. This
process will continue until they solve the puzzle or there are no more
players left.
SPOILER
ALERT: The movie clocks in at 98 minutes. If you take into account the
first act and time between intervals, you know at least a couple will
figure this game out. Especially when the French version is only 83
minutes long.
"Nine
Dead" is definitely the most anticlimactic torture flick. Unless you
want to classify it as noir (Please spare that genre.), it can only be
associated with the "Saws", "Hostels" and gruesome foreign fare, at
least that is how it seems to have been advertised. It fails to realize
the pay offs to an execution need to be awesome or unique kills. So
after one guy's squib blows up over his shirt, the film just becomes
boring.
If
we had dynamic characters or performances, we may root for someone's
survival. Because we do not want any of them to survive, the movie drags
as we wait for someone to take a round above the waist.
The
story itself is way too simple and linear. Throughout the tale,
characters keep asking each other to stay on track. This screenwriter,
Patrick Wehe Mahoney, must not have understood "Saw", "Se7en" or
"Revenge of the Sith" because for a story like this to work, the scheme
has to have a larger scale. Otherwise, you do not empathize with the
villain. You wind up thinking he is just a petty asshole.
As
for directing and editing, this is on par with junior college first
assignments. Since Chris Shadley has been in pictures for six years, the
direction is inexcusable when you are working with just one set.
"Nine
Dead" shows us that despite Rob Van Dam and Dave Bautista's best
efforts, Baton Rouge is not the new Hollywood of the east. Shadley's
film is part of a genre that is dependent on shocking the audience, but
there are no thrills to be seen. The film promised the emotional
destruction of Sabrina the Teenage Witch. Everyone want to see that, but
thankfully, no distributor picked up this damn near criminal let down.
| ||
If it does not involve pro-wrestling, this is Russ Stevens's effort to create the one stop blog for movies that are cut to the ideal run-time, 90 minutes. This blog may feature films that may range from 71 minutes to 1 hour 40 minutes, but 101 minutes and up are too long. An hour and a half can justify cutting a film into two chapters and a book into three. Hobbits and Katniss have too many ending, consider this an effort to stop that.
Monday, April 20, 2020
We Are 138: "9 Dead"...We Wish
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