Sunday 14 December 2014

Annabelle (2014)

(SPOILER ALERT: DO NOT READ THIS POST IF YOU DON'T WANT TO KNOW WHO DIES IN THE END)

[Pretty sure this was meant to be a Halloween hit, but Good Lord! I have no idea how I managed to only laugh once during the screening of this movie!]

Annabelle (2014) is an American supernatural horror film starring Annabelle Wallis, Ward Horton, Tony Amendola and Alfre Woodard, directed by John R. Leonetti.

In the end, the life and soul of new mother Annabelle Wallis, is saved by the sacrifice of guilt laden, recent acquaintance Alfre Woodard's.

Woken in the night by a blood-curdling scream from their neighbour friends' home, mother-to-be, Wallis rouses her almost qualified doctor husband, Ward Horton, who decides they should investigate themselves, before troubling the police.

Letting himself in through their front door, Horton emerges moments later, soaked in blood, insisting his wife call an ambulance from the safety of their own home, which she does, only to be confronted by a pair of knife wielding, white-robed occultists, one of whom stabs Wallis in the side, before he is shot dead by police who arrive on the scene. The other locking herself in the couples' nursery, where she commits suicide, while holding Wallis's prized doll, a recent present from Horton.

Lucky not to lose her unborn baby, Wallis returns home, demanding that Horton dispose of her prized doll, the last reminder of their recent ordeal, which he does. Strangely, though, since the incident, appliances in the couples' home start operating of their own accord, eventually leading to a house fire, while Horton is briefly absent, from which Wallis is fortunate to be rescued.

The trauma causes Wallis to give birth to a baby daughter and convinces the couple that they must relocate.

Moving into an apartment with unusually noisy upstairs neighbours, the pair are surprised when the doll Horton had thrown in the trash turns up in the last of their moving cartons, and which Wallis now decides she should keep following their pastor, Tony Amendola's advice that embracing their recent trials will only make their marriage stronger.

Unfortunately, the couples' home appliances continue to malfunction, with Wallis experiencing several unexplainable and nerve shredding incidents, including the ghostly apparition of the woman who killed herself in their home, the daughter of their murdered neighbours, who, according to police, had returned to her home to perform some sort of sacrificial summoning ritual with her satanic cult boyfriend, and a terrifying encounter with a black horned demon in the darkened basement of their apartment building, that makes a grab for Wallis's arm, leaving a short-lived scar that resembles a symbol daubed in blood on the wall beside the suicide woman's body.

Convinced that the doll is the cause, they seek more advice from Amendola, who suggests it is being used to steal souls, and agrees to take it to church, where its influence might be attenuated. But, after also seeing the ghostly apparition of the suicide woman on the steps of his church, Amendola, doll in hand, is brutally flung to the ground by some unseen force.

Relieved to have been relieved of the doll, Wallis welcomes Woodard, who has taken a special interest in her and her daughter since Wallis showed up at her book-store looking for information on the occult, into their apartment, just as Amendola recovers conciousness in hospital, in time to warn Horton, who is at his bedside, that the doll is missing and that Wallis, and not their baby's soul, is in danger.

Unable to warn his wife over the malfunctioning phone, Horton rushes home.

But before he arrives, Willis becomes hysterical when she answers the door to a weirdly demonic Amendola and then finds her daughter missing.

Woodard desperately tries to convince Wallis to leave without her daughter, just as the noises from upstairs reach a crescendo, and the black horned demon Wallis encountered in the basement materialises in her hallway, flinging Woodard out of the apartment.

Trapped alone and frantic, Wallis demands to know what the demon wants in exchange for her daughter?

Realising that it is her soul it wants, she picks up the doll and prepares to throw herself out of the window, just as Horton bursts in with Woodard.

Hauling Wallis back into the room, Horton pleads with her not to kill herself for the sake of their baby, until Woodard decides that she can assuage the guilt she feels for her own daughter's death due to her falling asleep at the wheel, by offering her own soul in exchange for the couple's child.

Grabbing the doll, Woodard launches herself out of the window, falling to her death. And the couple's child duly re-materialises in its cot.

The doll is next seen being bought from a shop by a mother for her nurse daughter whose unnerving experiences with it provide the creepy prologue to Wallis and Horton's story.

Finally the doll is seen displayed in a locked glass cabinet, with a warning never to open it.


[Annabelle is the name of the murdered neighbours' suicide daughter.]

It goes without saying that audiences are expected to slip their critical faculties into neutral, in order to accept that characters in these situations are never going to act in a remotely reasonable, realistic or even consistent manner. But even so, the ridiculousness of this story is hard to ignore. Which is not to say that the players don't do their best with the material they are given. And the makers do provide just about enough dread, menace and jolts to keep the average fright-knight and panic-princess happy. So if you're the type who enjoys the thrill of the haunted house roller-coaster, without requiring it to make much sense, then hop aboard. This spin-off prequel is bound to be the start of another franchise.

Source(s):
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Annabelle_(film)

Wednesday 10 December 2014

The Butterfly Effect (2004)

(SPOILER ALERT: DO NOT READ THIS POST IF YOU DON'T WANT TO KNOW WHETHER TIME-TRAVEL CAN BE USED TO CORRECT THE MISTAKES OF THE PAST?)

['Tis the season to be busy, so here's another bust from the archives, of a film that is a perfect example of Hollywood's willingness to misinterpret the meaning of scientific terms* in the cause of a good movie title.]

The Butterfly Effect (2004) is an American science fiction thriller romance film written and directed by Eric Bress and J. Mackye Gruber, starring Ashton Kutcher and Amy Smart.

In the end, history-altering, time-travelling teenager, Ashton Kutcher, decides to forsake the love of his life, Amy Smart, for the greater good, by sabotaging their first meeting.

While reading a passage from his childhood journals to a curious date, undergraduate psychology student Kutcher experiences a fit during which he finds himself reliving an episode from his past, filling in one of many previously missing parts of his memory, when Smart's viciously bullying brother burned Kutcher's pet dog to death, tied up in a sack.

The details of Kutcher's recovered memory are confirmed by a childhood friend who witnessed the incident, which prompts Kutcher to deliberately revisit another episode from his past, the details of which he has until now been unable to recall, where his friend was traumatised after being bullied by Smart's brother into placing a lit explosive in a mailbox, the explosion from which kills a mother and baby.

In an attempt to get to the bottom of another lost memory, Kutcher visits Smart who he has not seen since he and his mother moved away following the accident with the explosive. Tragically, Kutcher's visit proves so upsetting for Smart that she kills herself.

Hoping to save Smart from the memory he hoped she might help him recall, that eventually drove her to suicide, Kutcher revisits another blanked episode when Smart's abusive, paedophile father manipulated the 7 year old Kutcher and Smart into making an obscene video. Kutcher uses the threat of Smart's future suicide to terrify her father into leaving her alone and doing something to control her bullying brother.

Kutcher's intervention has a significant impact on the present, where he and Smart, no longer an insecure waitress but also a college undergraduate, are now a happy couple. However, their life together is destroyed when Smart's brother, further brutalised by the discipline Kutcher encouraged his father to inflict, attacks Kutcher in a jealous rage, and is killed in the ensuing struggle, sending Kutcher to jail, where he finds himself surrounded by even more brutality.

Intending to save Smart's brother from a life of violence and therefore himself from eventual jail, Kutcher revisits the incident involving his dog's death.

Claiming that he can atone for the death of the mother and child his friend was responsible for, by helping Kutcher free his dog from the sack, Kutcher presses a shard of scrap metal into his friend's hand. However, instead of freeing the dog, Kutcher's friend uses the shard to stab Smart's bullying brother to death.

So although Kutcher avoids jail, he finds his friend committed to an insane asylum and the equally traumatised Smart has run away from home, descending into a life of drug addicted prostitution.

Determined to set things straight, Kutcher returns to the mailbox incident preventing the deaths that lead to his friend's murder of Smart's brother. As a result, his friend and Smart become a happy student couple, and Smart's brother himself turns into a committed christian do-gooder. But, in doing so, not only loses both arms in the explosion, but also leads to his mother's development of terminal lung cancer from the chain smoking she resorts to as a result of his injuries.

Desperate to save his mother, Kutcher returns in time to destroy the explosive kept by Smart's father in the basement of their home, only for it to accidentally kill the 7 year old Smart, sending the traumatised Kutcher to the insane asylum for life, before he has a chance to begin writing his journals that allow him to undertake his trips into the past.

Kutcher's only remaining hope lies in some home movie footage he persuades his mother to bring him to watch in the asylum, which he uses to revisit the first time he met Smart and her family.

Instead of making friends with her when they are introduced, his is rude and threatening, so that when her parents separate, she and her brother choose to live with their mother, and never become involved with Kutcher or his friend. At which point Kutcher decides to destroy all materials that he could use to trigger any further trips into his past.

Many years later Kutcher has a chance encounter with the grown up and successful looking Smart who he passes on a crowded city street. She only seems to show a vague recognition of the grown up Kutcher, who decides not to introduce himself, and walk on by.


The Butterfly Effect is another example of a movie that almost defies busting, because of the convoluted way in which its plot unfolds. It isn't until the very end of the movie that the full story can be appreciated. Indeed, in this case, the final reveal is so understated that it might go unnoticed.

It sounds obvious to say that you really need to watch the whole movie to know what it's about. But too often, the arc of a story can be divined almost from its opening scenes. One that manages to keep you guessing right up to the final credits is a rare treat, and should be savoured.

*[The title of the movie refers to the metaphorical butterfly effect, a popular principle in chaos theory which states that in any dynamic system, small initial differences may over time lead to large unforeseen consequences. However, the changes that are effected by Kutcher's character in the story are neither small nor insignificant.

The butterfly effect is a common trope in fiction when presenting scenarios involving time travel and "what if" cases where one storyline diverges at the moment of a seemingly minor event resulting in two significantly different outcomes.

However, more accurately, what the trope represents and the movie portrays is the cascade effect where an unforeseen chain of events occurs, due to an act affecting a system.

Of course, "the cascade effect" doesn't have quite the same ring to it as "the butterfly effect" does ;)]

Source(s):
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Butterfly_Effect
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Butterfly_effect
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cascade_effect