Saturday, 14 October 2017

The Uninvited


2009’s “The Uninvited”, directed by the Guard Brothers.

Starring Emily Browning, Ariele Kebbel, David Straitharn, Elizabeth Banks, Maya Massar, and Kevin McNulty.

What is it about?

Teenager Emily Browning has an ailing mother who one night passes away. Unable to process the details of the event, she checks into a mental hospital, until released. She returns to her father (David Straitharn)’s house, who lives with her sister (Ariele Kebbel), and his controlling girlfriend (Elizabeth Banks). 2 things are clear: that the sisters don’t like Banks and her possible ulterior motives, and that Browning may not be processing things properly- and is in fact hallucinating. Will she be able to cope with her mental illness while convincing her dad his girlfriend isn’t welcome?

Why is it worth seeing?

Propelled off of the successes of adapting the Japanese horror film, “Ringu” into “The Ring”, and “The Ring 2”, producers than turned to South Korea. They discovered the 2003 movie, “A Tale of 2 Sisters”, which served as inspiration for, “The Uninvited”. 

Clearly made and marketed to teen audiences, “Uninvited” tries to do something resembling “Jacob’s Ladder”- but is closer to Snakes and Ladders. The movie introduces the Browning teenage protagonist as somebody we want to identify with, but when the script pulls the rug out from us, it’s unclear if we’re supposed to care. Worse, did anybody who made this care? Deeply cynical, while using mental illness as a fashionable plot device, even if the film was made better you’d have to be a sociopath to appreciate it.


The Guard brothers have some entertaining sequences and make this teen melodrama more entertaining than it ought to be, but they resemble the Strause brothers more than the Coen brothers. I just wish there was a moral to the story of mental illness and suspense other than, “Gotcha!”

Rating:

2.5/5



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