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Night Swim | Reelviews Movie Reviews

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Night Swim | Reelviews Movie Reviews

Night Swim looks and feels like one of those
throw-away horror films that Blumhouse churns out with regularity. Last year, M3gan
took the January pole position and lapped the pack, stunning with a $30M
opening weekend and final domestic gross of nearly $100M. Night Swim isn’t
expected to do as well – the marketing hasn’t been as aggressive and the film
isn’t as expertly made – but it should fare nicely in the wasteland that is
early January.

Night Swim is primarily a ghost story but, although
director Bryce McGuire (who wrote the screenplay based on a 4-minute short film
he co-made with Rod Blackhurst in 2014) choreographs some creepy water-based
scares (the best of which, as featured in the trailer, involves a game of Marco
Polo), the plot is a mess. The “truth” is unsatisfying and the resolution lacks
impact. The movie is at its best when it’s content with being atmospheric and spooky.
As soon is it starts explaining things, the story goes down the drain with the
water being pumped out of the pool.

The movie opens with an effectively unsettling prologue in which
a young girl (Ayazhan Dalabayeva) has an unfortunate counter while swimming in
a backyard pool. Jumping ahead to the present day, we meet the Waller family:
father Ray (Wyatt Russell), mother Eve (Kerry Condon), daughter Izzy (Amelie
Hoeferle), and son Elliot (Gavin Warren). Ray, a former Major League Baseball
player, is afflicted with a progressive neuromuscular disease (possibly ALS),
and has been recommended with daily water therapy to help with his condition.
So the family buys a house with a backyard pool. And, while his daily swims
seem to cause an almost miraculous improvement to Ray’s health, the other three
family members have less pleasant experiences with the pool, hearing voices, seeing
ghostly apparitions and, in one case, discovering an underground world of
ghouls and ghosts far beneath the surface. While Eve, Izzy, and Elliot come to
believe that the pool is haunted, Ray sees only his physical advances.

I haven’t seen Night Swim’s inspiration but it’s easy
to envision that, denuded of most of its ridiculous plot, this could be fertile
ground for horror. McGuire proves himself to be a more capable director than
writer. By using a variety of lenses and angles, he expands the rather ordinary
setting of an in-ground pool into something vast and potentially dangerous. This
seemingly harmless recreational location becomes fraught with terrifying possibilities,
giving new meaning to the term “deep end.”

The Blumhouse method demands that filmmakers refrain from
hiring “name” actors as a way to lower costs. Although there have been
exceptions (notably Jamie Lee Curtis), most B-grade productions emerging out of
Jason Blum’s warehouse have featured anonymous performers of variable quality. Night
Swim
is no different. While Oscar nominee Kerry Condon is expectedly very
good, crafting a credible character from a thinly-written type, he co-stars
aren’t on the same level. Young actors Amelie Hoeferle and Gavin Warren could
use more seasoning and Wyatt Russell (the son of Kurt Russell and Goldie Hawn)
spends a little too much time mugging for the camera.

For those whose only requirements for horror movies are that
they avoid the excesses of blood/gore/violence prevalent in R-rated fare and
incorporate a few good jump-scares, Night Swim checks the requisite
boxes. For those looking for a more complete experience, however, the movie
struggles even to achieve the level where it would be considered worthwhile as
a streaming option. It has moments but those never add up to a complete film.
Oh, and as an aside, how come it’s okay to kill cats in horror movies while
executing dogs are verboten?

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Night Swim (United States, 2024)





Movie Reviews

Millie Bobby Brown leads frothy sleuthing caper

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Millie Bobby Brown leads frothy sleuthing caper

A still from ‘Enola Holmes 3’
| Photo Credit: Netflix

Enola Holmes 3sees Philip Barantini (Adolescence) take over direction from Fleabag’s Harry Bradbeer while Jack Thorne (another Adolescence alum) continues as writer from the first two films. The supposed darker take is not very apparent in this tale featuring the consultant detective’s sister.

Based on Nancy Springer’s charming The Enola Holmes Mysteries, Enola Holmes 3 opens with a wedding in Malta. Enola (Millie Bobby Brown), the younger sister of Sherlock (Henry Cavill), and a detective in her own right, as we have seen from the earlier films, is getting married to sweet, idealistic Lord Tewkesbury (Louis Partridge).

Sherlock is in Malta for the wedding which he strongly disapproves, believing Enola will not be able to pursue her career as a detective once she marries and becomes Lady Tewkesbury. Enola has her own doubts about the marriage — not about Tewkesbury but about his world, the people in it and their expectations.

Enola Holmes 3 (English)

Director: Philip Barantini

Cast: Millie Bobby Brown, Louis Partridge, Himesh Patel, Sharon Duncan-Brewster, Henry Cavill, Helena Bonham Carter, Susan Wokoma

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Runtime: 105 minutes

Storyline: As Enola prepares to marry Lord Tewkesbury in Malta, her brother goes missing and the game is afoot

When she finally gets into the carriage for her wedding, she realises she is being followed by a masked rider. After a thrilling chase involving the dropping of many bridal veils, the pursuer is revealed to be Dr Watson (Himesh Patel), Sherlock’s flatmate, friend and chronicler (not yet, though). The mask, the good doctor explains, is for allergies.

He was thundering after Enola because Sherlock has vanished, probably kidnapped, as he was working on another case. When Enola’s future mother-in-law, Lady Tewkesbury (Hattie Morahan) also goes missing, the wedding is forgotten as Enola races against time to solve the mystery.

A still from ‘Enola Holmes 3’

A still from ‘Enola Holmes 3’
| Photo Credit:
Netflix

The pieces of the puzzle include the Battle of Khost in Afghanistan, looted gold, the Maltese fight for independence in the person of Mikiel Mizzi (Joe Azzopardi) from the Partito Anti-Riformista, and the criminal mastermind Moriarty (Sharon Duncan-Brewster).

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Enola’s mother, Eudoria (Helena Bonham Carter) and her friend Edith (Susan Wokoma) are skulking around giving Enola invisible support as Eudoria is in trouble with the law for her dynamite-forward ways.

Enola Holmes 3 zips by in a series of frantic action sequences, quips and callbacks. The storybook look is propped up by those amazing pop-ups. Darker themes arrive in lines such as Moriarty saying “There are few British names that are not tarnished with the pain of its empire.”

Brown has created an endearing heroine in her Enola, even if her habit of breaking the fourth wall, while definitely reduced, has gone way beyond twee to be outright annoying. Cavill’s Sherlock is brave and beautiful and just that little bit cross, while Carter’s Eudoria walks the line between gently eccentric and decidedly odd as she dispenses gems of wisdom including “the puzzle is always as devious as the setter.”

Fast, fun and eminently forgettable, this is popcorn entertainment at its most efficient.

 Enola Holmes 3 is currently streaming on Netflix

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Sender

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Sender

In Sender, writer-director Russell Goldman’s high-anxiety debut, the filmmaker expands on his 2022 short Return to Sender, in which Allison Tolman starred as a woman who receives packages she didn’t order. That may not sound like a premise that would result in a paranoid, darkly comedic thriller, much less a feature. But in extending his story from 18 minutes to just over 90, Goldman follows a maddening scenario involving an online retailer called Smirk, a fictionalized Amazon counterpart. More significantly, he captures the frenzied mindset of his protagonist, who grapples with staying sober and several other major life changes—all compounded by a layer of justifiable paranoia brought on by the endless packages. Goldman’s tweaky style and elusive scripting create a peculiar, out-of-whack presentation that destabilizes the viewer, firmly placing us in his main character’s perspective. However, by the end, the journey through this cine-manic headspace doesn’t add up to much, and the potential character study at the center feels somewhat lost in the mechanics of the conspiracy. 

Britt Lower (AppleTV’s Severance) stars as Julia, who has just lost her job and moved into a rental home to get her life on track. She is backed financially by her overbearing sister Tatiana (Anna Baryshnikov), who occasionally comes nosing around to verify that Julia doesn’t backslide. And she doesn’t. Julia attends regular Alcoholics Anonymous meetings, where she meets the steely Whitney (Rhea Seehorn), who isn’t interested in being her sponsor. But at home, Julia receives a Smirk package with her brand of lipstick. The problem? She didn’t order it. She calls customer service, and the representative doesn’t help much before telling her, “Be sure to stay alert and aware.” Wait, what? Sender is loaded with nagging, unplaceable details like this. They’re often amusing, intriguing, and exasperating in the same moment. But these pieces don’t complete a whole picture, at least not a narratively satisfying one. 

The Smirk packages, delivered by the outwardly helpful, nice-guy driver Charlie (David Dastmalchian), contain a random assortment of objects, from drum kits to protein powder. The squirrelly Julia, already coming apart at the seams from her recent drama, doesn’t know what to make of it. She’s convinced there’s some plot against her, perhaps by someone at Smirk. To what end, she doesn’t know. But Goldman gives us a glimpse of the long-term consequences of her ordeal in the prologue, which features Jamie Lee Curtis (also a producer) as Lisa, a woman in circumstances similar to Julia’s. Lisa’s response to receiving a box of soil with a broken shin pad (with “Can’t Can’t Can” scrawled on it) entails an attempt to suffocate herself with the bubble wrap, only to do far worse with a sharp edge of the shin pad. To show Lisa’s fate, Goldman’s imagery becomes twisted and surreal but also cryptic. 

Sender’s disorienting mood is matched by a skewed formal presentation. Cinematographer Gemma Doll-Grossman’s wide-angle lenses and arch angles might feel at home in a Ken Russell or Terry Gilliam feature such as The Devils (1971) or 12 Monkeys (1996). Julia’s half-remembered drinking binges, accented by blurry close-ups, suggest she may have slept with any number of coworkers. She can’t remember, and it embarrasses her. Her rental is dressed in simple if shabby décor, which gives way to Julia’s erratic collage-like overhaul. Melisa Myers’ stuffed production design makes the most of heightened colors and banal, cluttered rooms that lend a normality to the bizarre, ever more disturbing predicament. Nathan Ruyle’s erratic music delivers what must be described as a soundscape rather than a traditional score, with collusive sound effects and tones driving our certainty that Julia is onto something. Along with Marco Rosas’ discordant editing, Goldman’s technical approach effectively reflects Julia’s fragmented, sleep-deprived mind. But his work as a writer hasn’t done enough to justify this level of technique. 

After Julia makes a revelatory discovery that small cameras have been embedded in the products from those mysterious packages, the eventual explanation about what has been happening and why strains logic and underwhelms. It also raises even more unanswered questions. Although well-made and acted—Lower and Seehorn should be on track to movie stardom—Goldman’s script could have used another draft to better work through what unfolds. Sender doesn’t give us enough of its characters’ inner lives beyond the situation at hand, so Julia, Charlie, Tatiana, and Whitney feel like devices in a scenario rather than well-drawn human beings. Even so, Goldman fills his film with deeply broken people who try to gain control of their lives by controlling others, exposing and preying on their weaknesses. Despite the material’s potential resonance, Goldman’s style is overpowering. Still, his kernel of an idea and the way he explores it demonstrate his clear skill, and for much of Sender, its sheer oddball energy earns admiration.

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Neil’s Movie Reviews

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Neil’s Movie Reviews

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