The Bye Bye Man
Three students move into a creepy
house and the countdown is on.
5,4,3,2,1, and yes, they have
managed to release some evil into the world.
Well played.
Now how many more clichés can
they deliver?
The answer is that they leave no
stone unturned in covering every single one that you could think of.
There could be some worth in it
if there had been a tongue in cheek element added, or maybe if they had went
over the top with jarring shock scares, but they didn’t.
It is one of those movies that
fans of the genre will sit through and at the end of the credits start asking
themselves why they bothered.
Every ten minutes you think that
you will hang in there to see if it picks up, and then it ends.
It ends with another cliché too.
You know the one. Where they
leave it open ended for The Bye Bye Man 2.
The movie is really just a
reinterpretation of films like Candyman from the nineties, but as there have
been so any of them there isn’t that much left to explore. The only option for
anyone attempting to cover the same ground would be to make it bigger and
better than anything that has come before.
And on that premise this movie
just doesn’t do that.
Why Him?
With John Hamburg, the writer of Meet
The Parents, Meet the Fockers and Little Fockers, directing it’s no surprise
that the same themes are revisited in Why Him?
Those of very different people
being thrown together in the name of love.
And while repetition can start to
deliver limited enjoyment it has to be said that he hasn’t scraped the bottom
of the barrel yet.
He doesn’t seem to be close at
all.
The unfiltered character of Laird
Mayhew that James Franco plays is hilarious, and the stressed father Ned
Fleming covered by Bryan Cranston is very easily empathised with.
I would presume that every man
that has a daughter would literally want to beat Franco to a pulp.
Then get some paddles on his
chest and revive him just to do it all again.
I certainly did.
However scene stealer Keegan-Michael
Key as Gustav is the unheralded star of the show.
As a foil to James Franco he excels,
and in what is really a minor role he ultimately carries a great deal of the story
on his shoulders.
He is the conduit for so many
scenes to slip into another that without him there would feel like something
was missing.
Keegan-Michael Key |
It is not beyond the realms of
imagination that John Hamburg could take the Gustav character and make him the lead
in a follow up as the role lends itself to being transplanted into another
story rather easily.
Truth be told I think that
premise would be a more attractive one rather than him extending the Why Me?
cast into a sequel.
So more Gustav please?
A word of warning now.
For those who are maybe thinking
of sitting down to watch it with young kids as a family affair.
Don’t!
You will just have too much to
explain to them too early in life.
It’s not worth it.
At least let them get to their
teenage years and then you can laugh at their discomfort.
KISS fans may want to have a
little peak at this one too as there’s a rather good cameo from Paul and Gene
in it.
Website
Website
No comments:
Post a Comment