Movie Reviews
Five Nights At Freddy's Movie Review: Josh Hutcherson Starrer About Killer Robots Is An Underwhelming Horror Thriller
Five Nights At Freddy’s Movie Review: Josh Hutcherson Starrer About Killer Robots Is An Underwhelming Horror Thriller
About Five Nights At Freddy’s
The Hunger Games star Josh Hutcherson headlines the film adaptation of Five Nights at Freddy’s, a popular video game franchise. Mixing in elements of paranoia, abandonment and good old-fashioned slasher elements, the horror thriller takes viewers into an abandoned diner where killer robots come to life at night. Hutcherson plays a traumatised security guard who tries to make sense of his surroundings before it’s too late. Released theatrically last year, Five Nights at Freddy’s is available on OTT through Jio Cinema.
Five Nights at Freddy’s: Narrative
Mike Schmidt (Hutcherson) is a troubled young man who is never the same after his little brother Garrett’s disappearance when he was 12. He is also caretaker to his 10-year-old sister Abby (Piper Rubio) and gets pushed to hold down a steady job after his aunt Jane (Mary Stuart Masterson) challenges him for custody. Mike lands a job as the night security guard at Freddy Fazbear’s Pizza, a former diner and arcade that shut down allegations of missing children. The diner is the source of several unanswered supernatural events as Mikey finds himself drawn to the madness.
Five Nights at Freddy’s: Writing and Direction
Video game creator Scott Cawthon has collaborated with Seth Cuddeback and director Emma Tammi to get the story across. And while the story remains intact, the mood doesn’t. There isn’t enough drama or chills involved to keep you invested. Younger fans may be satisfied but knowing this was a Blumhouse production, the overall output left me a bit underwhelmed. Tammi also teases the gore off-screen as the victims are pursued and then neatly disposed of. Even the threat to the lives of Mike and Abby feels a bit meh. The only thing that worked for was the flashback and dream sequences where Mikey imagines trying to save Garrett repeatedly.
Five Nights at Freddy’s: Performances
Hutcherson turns in a sad-eyed performance as the older brother who can’t get anything right. Elizabeth Lail is also sincere as the local police officer Vanessa who keeps looking out for the Schmidts. The casting of Matthew Lillard is a big tip-off to horror fans and the actor’s presence hints at a larger role in the film. However, the film is led by animatronic killer robots named Freddy Fazbear, Bonnie, Chica, Foxy, and Mr Cupcake who are the real ‘stars’ as the long-standing residents of the diner. Their design gives more menace than cuteness, though they still lack the overall scare to pull it off.
Five Nights at Freddy’s: Critique
At under two hours, Five Nights at Freddy’s is distracting for the time being but won’t be enough for fans fond of blood and added drama. This one is strictly for the game fans who might enjoy the little Easter eggs strewn about for added fun.
End of Article
Movie Reviews
Leela Vinodham Review: A Plain Rural Romance
BOTTOM LINE
A Plain Rural Romance
PLATFORM
ETV WIN
What Is the Film About?
Prasad, a happy-go-lucky youngster, has just turned a graduate, spending three college years without gathering the courage to express his love for Leela. After many brief glances, failed attempts to strike up a conversation with Leela, Prasad finally connects with her after over mobile texts. When one of his texts doesn’t earn an immediate response, Prasad gets increasingly anxious.
Performances
This is one among Shanmukh Jaswanth’s better digital outings in the recent times, where he impressively slips into the role of an anxious village boy. Anagha Ajith has limited screen time but delivers the goods in key situations without trying too hard. RJ Mirchi Saran (Raji) is the pick of the lot among Prasad’s friends, though his timing appears to be slightly influenced by Sunil.
Other actors in the gang – Madhan Majji, Chaitanya Garikina, Shiva Thummala, Shravanthi Anand and others – have decent screen presence as well. Surprisingly, the experienced hands like Aamani, Goparaju Ramana, VS Roopa Lakshmi, don’t add much value to the proceedings.
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Analysis
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Like scores of stories in Telugu cinema and on OTT thriving on nostalgia, Leela Vinodam is a tender, small-town romance told from a male perspective. Set in the late 2000s, during the early days of the mobile phone era where communication took a new digital turn, the film banks on a simple idea, tapping into the insecurities and apprehensions of a good-at-heart, lovestruck youngster Prasad.
Borrowing a leaf out of films like Mail, Raja Vaaru Rani Gaaru, Leela Vinodam’s protagonist Prasad is a timid boy who struggles to convey his love to a college sweetheart Leela. He is surrounded by friends – Raji, Swarna and gang – who push him to do the needful but end up confusing him more. The wafer-thin story has a minimal conflict, focusing on the little joys in villages and one-sided love.
Also Read – OTT Review: Despatch – Bajpayee Too Can’t Save This Bore
The director Pavan Sunkara takes his own sweet-time to establish Prasad’s love for Leela in the first 30 minutes through his interactions with a best friend. While it’s evident that Leela is interested in Prasad, the absence of a direct confirmation makes the latter anxious. When he ultimately shares his feelings for Leela over a text and she doesn’t reply, all hell breaks loose.
Leela Vinodam, more than a love story, serves as a time-capsule of a different era (probably aimed at the 90s kid?) before social media, other modes of instant communication took charge of our lives and SMS was the go-to option for conversations. Through Prasad’s confusions, the film captures a brief passage of time in the character’s lives where they could afford to be irresponsible.
That the film relies on a very basic premise – a boy’s wait for a response from his lover – is its strength and weakness at once. The simplistic idea is an advantage because the conflict is very relatable to its target audience. There’s no scope for confusion in the storytelling and the tale provides an indirect opportunity to explore the rural milieu through the oddball characters, sprinkled with humour.
However, after a point, the screenplay loses its spunk and gets laborious, as the director desperately finds various ways to delay the inevitable and understand Prasad’s confusions from many dimensions through imaginary scenarios, trying to decode what factors could’ve prevented Leela from responding to him. Ultimately, the impressive climax salvages the film, ending it on a feel-good note.
Leela Vinodam is neither good nor very bad. It’s simply an inoffensive time pass fare with a few takeaways – nostalgia, humour and bromance. A more imaginative screenplay could’ve bettered its impact.
Music and Other Departments?
TR Krishna Chetan’s score keeps the playful spirit of the story intact, though the songs are strictly okay. Anush Kumar’s cinematography, replete with a lively colour palette, is an asset to the film, making full use of the pleasant rural backdrop and prominent landmarks in the village. Better work with the editing and the screenplay may have helped its cause.
Highlights?
Relatable story
Nostalgia factor
Decent performances, cinematography
Drawbacks?
Tedious screenplay
Writing lacks freshness, novelty
Inconsistent with humour
Did I Enjoy It?
Only in parts
Will You Recommend It?
If you don’t mind an okayish small-town tale on one-sided love
Leela Vinodham OTT Movie Review by M9
Movie Reviews
Movie Review: 'The Lord of the Rings: The War of the Rohirrim' – Catholic Review
NEW YORK (OSV News) – Catholic moviegoers will naturally take an interest in any project related to the works of their renowned co-religionist, novelist J.R.R. Tolkien (1892-1973). But the question always remains whether any new adventure set in his fictional land of Middle-earth will share in the elusive magic of the stories he himself spun.
In the case of the animated drama “The Lord of the Rings: The War of the Rohirrim” (Warner Bros.), unfortunately, the comparison is less than favorable to the newcomer. While director Kenji Kamiyama’s fantasy is often lovely to behold and its moral values are mostly in order, his tale of derring-do stagnates because the characters who inhabit it are mostly one-dimensional.
Take our heroine, Princess Hera (voice of Gaia Wise), for example. A dauntless warrior whose courage and skills are initially underrated by her otherwise sage father, King Helm Hammerhand (voice of Brian Cox), she’s a symbol of female empowerment. Beyond that, however, we learn little about her.
The conflict of the title is initiated after Hera’s childhood friend, Wulf (voice of Luke Pasqualino), seeks her hand in marriage and is rebuffed. Amid the recriminations that follow, King Helm unintentionally takes the life of Wulf’s dad, Freca (voice of Shaun Dooley), instantly transforming the bereft son into his, and Hera’s, implacable enemy.
As Wulf relentlessly pursues his revenge, the script — penned by a quartet of screenwriters — highlights his principal adversaries’ chivalrous dedication to truth-telling, faith-keeping and the granting of mercy. Yet there’s also a vaguely discernible anti-marriage message attached to Hera’s insistence on remaining independent and untethered.
While the narrative of her struggle is clearly meant to seem epic and poetic, there’s a static feel to the proceedings with Hera and her allies never faltering in virtue and Wulf proving villainous at every turn. As a result, a sense of investment in the fate of those on screen is largely lacking.
Assessed for its appropriate audience, the movie is more successful. The strife is bloodless and the dialogue almost unblemished. So, although it’s too frightening for little kids, this addition to Tolkien’s lore — set 200 years before the action of his three main volumes — is acceptable for most others.
The film contains stylized combat and other violence, characters in peril, some grim images and a single mild oath. The OSV News classification is A-II — adults and adolescents. The Motion Picture Association rating is PG-13 — parents strongly cautioned. Some material may be inappropriate for children under 13.
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Movie Reviews
Movie Review: 'Kraven the Hunter' – Catholic Review
NEW YORK (OSV News) – As strained as it is bloodsoaked and morally wayward, the would-be action adventure “Kraven the Hunter” (Columbia) is a hopeless dud. On the upside, moviegoers misguided enough to patronize the film will likely be too bored to be much corrupted by it.
After a brief slice of mayhem set in the present day, director J.C. Chandor’s brutish origin story for the titular Marvel Comics character carries us back to the unhappy youth of his alter ego, Sergei Kravinoff (Levi Miller). Both mild-mannered Sergei and his equally gentle half-brother Dimitri (Billy Barratt) live in fear of their Russian gangster dad, Nikolai (Russell Crowe).
Determined to toughen both lads up, Nikolai forces them to join him on an African safari, during which Sergei has a near-fatal encounter with a lion. Yet a magical potion given to him by a stranger named Calypso (Diaana Babnicova) — a girl his own age to whom viewers have previously been introduced — not only revives Sergei but endows him with superpowers.
Once grown, and now played by Aaron Taylor-Johnson, Sergei uses his gifts to track down criminals to whom he doles out do-it-yourself justice, gaining him his nickname. The intense isolation of his undercover lifestyle is relieved only by his ongoing relationship with Dimitri (Fred Hechinger) and his newly-minted partnership with the adult version of Calypso (Ariana DeBose).
Calypso, a crusading attorney who is meant to serve as our ethical compass, briefly questions Sergei’s extra-legal methods. But this does nothing to stop his sequential rampages. Throw in the fact that Calypso’s family features a long line of tarot card-carrying witches and it’s clear that
cinephiles of any sense will not feel a yen for “Kraven.”
The film contains excessive graphic violence with much gore, benignly viewed vigilantism, an occult theme, a few uses of profanity and several instances each of rough language and crude talk. The OSV News classification is O — morally offensive. The Motion Picture Association rating is R — restricted. Under 17 requires accompanying parent or adult guardian.
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