Genre:
Thriller
Director: Simon West
Cast: Camilla Belle, Brian Geraghty, Katie
Cassidy, Clark Gregg
RunTime: 1 hr 27 mins
Released By: Columbia TriStar
Rating: PG (Some Frightening Scenes)
Official Website: http://www.sonypictures.com/movies/whenastrangercalls/international/
Opening
Day: 4 May 2006
Synopsis:
In a remote hilltop house, high school student JILL
JOHNSON (Camilla Belle) settles in for a routine night of
babysitting. With the children sound asleep and a beautiful
home to explore, she locks the door and sets the alarm. But
when a series of eerie phone calls from a STRANGER insists
that she “check the children,” Jill begins to
panic. Fear escalates to terror when she has the calls traced
and learns that the calls are coming from inside the house.
Jill must summon all of her inner strength if she is going
to fight back and make it out of the house alive.
Movie
Review:
When
the much darker 1979 original with Carol Kane took a popular
urban legend and translated it to the big screen, it gave
life to a terrifying concept of fending off danger when you
least expect it, which was what was great about it. It was
the sudden and climatic realisation of some unknown terror
that’s close by that set the mood for the entire movie.
It’s the same reason why Scream’s opening sequence
with Drew Barrymore was it’s most lampooned and memorable
part of its entire trilogy.
The
remake however, completely obliterates any sort of suspense
you might’ve had even before you commit to it, by choosing
to use its twist as the main hook in its promotional activities.
What’s left is yet another serial-killer-after-helpless-young-women
main plot that neither has a twist nor surprise to engage
audiences or even secure cinematic posterity. The story is
a heavy concept to carry for over 80 minutes. Even though
the movie does try, it never succeeds. Imagine a rugby player
catching the ball and trying to get to his touchline, but
he keeps fumbling with it and ends up not completing his run.
Whereas
the original’s opening was rife with nail-biting suspense,
the remake resorts to the cheap collective cache of every
cliché in the book. Household instruments starting
up unexpectedly, creaky floors and harried animals are just
some of the spooky items lined up 1 after the other just trying
to elicit a thrill where there’s none. Due to its director,
Simon West’s (Tomb Raider) aimless attempt at building
tension and foreboding, coupled with an overly anxious score
by James M. Dooley, it quickly rambles in its relatively simple
narrative. Jill (Camilla Belle) nervously roams through each
room in the house while finding something that jolts her out
of her perennial gawk.
It
seems like amateur hour at a bad short film festival when
a surplus amount of shamelessly obvious set-ups are laid in
the first 5 minutes. An indifferent subplot alluding to a
cheating boyfriend and traitorous ex-best-friend with even
worst supporting characters play a contrived role in Jill’s
babysitting exploits later in the film.
West
lacks imagination in inserting his own imprint in this project
as it plays out exactly as it’s predicted. It becomes
disjointed when scenes that don’t move the story along
are pointlessly weaved together with its limiting premise.
Getting no help from the stiff and alienating performance
from Camilla Belle, she listlessly carries the film’s
primary scenes. Her ditzy performance makes her appear like
the customary sacrificial dolt for a better serial-killer
movie instead of this film’s heroine. In the end, it
doesn’t aspire to anything more than a cheap rental,
which might seem a better bet when you take into account the
lack of gore – a staple of the modern horror genre.
Coming
after a slew of middling 70s horror remakes like The Amityville
Horror, The Fog and The Hills Have Eyes, a trend has become
apparent when retreads are becoming excessively employed just
when the horror/thriller genre is being revitalised by more
original efforts like Saw and Hostel.
However
the most disturbing aspect is that schlock films like these
remakes have the ability to end up top of the US box office
for a single weekend while effectively earning a profit and
spurring studios to fund more dreck like this in future.
Movie
Rating:
(A
trivial and unnecessary exercise in mediocre film-making,
all too predictable and lacking intrigue to be effective)
Review
by Justin Deimen
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