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Below Movie Review
Below Review

"Below" Overview

Rating: R
2002
Cast and Crew
Director : David TwohyProducer : Sue Baden-Powell
Screenwiter : Darren Aronofsky,David Twohy,Lucas Sussman
Starring : Bruce Greenwood,Matthew Davis,Olivia Williams,Scott Foley,Zach Galifianakis,Dexter Fletcher,Holt McCallany
When is somebody going to scare the shit out of us again?
Will the day arrive when I can watch a movie with the same frightened, uneasy
feeling I get when I walk through my darkened hallway at midnight?
Will boyfriends ever again have bruises on their arms from their scared
girlfriends’ reactions?
These questions zoom into mind after watching David Twohy’s Below, the latest
in a line of un-scary scary movies released since The Sixth Sense passed the
$200 million mark at the box office. You know the kind of film I’m talking
about: A lot of thought is put into atmosphere and lighting. There’s usually
one big, final scary twist after lots of apprehensive build up, which leads us
to think that last month’s cable bill was scarier.
Below pretty much follows the above game plan, this time the action takes place
upon an American submarine during World War II. While chasing the Germans in
the Atlantic Ocean, the crew of the USS Tiger Shark picks up three survivors
from a British merchant ship, including an attractive nurse (The Sixth Sense
alum Olivia Williams. Coincidence!?). Soon after, those odd things take place.
A phonograph unexpectedly begins playing. Some on the submarine begin hearing
strange voices. A copy of Shakespeare’s tragedies seemingly drops from nowhere.
Conflicting stories emerge about the sub’s original commanding officer and his
recent death.
The movie desperately needs something to get over the predictability factor,
but there’s not much to rely on. Setting the movie in a submarine is a great
idea, because there is literally nowhere for the characters to go. Other
directors have relied on the “no escape” concept (Die Hard, Under Siege, Speed)
for years with varying degrees of success. However, Twohy undermines himself
with his directing style. He favors a lot of quick cuts, but often in settings
that are dark and tightly framed, thereby destroying any action and suspense.
What’s worse, Twohy and fellow screenwriters Lucas Sussman and Requiem for a
Dream's Darren Aronofsky needlessly clutter a simple premise. We have numerous,
uninteresting characters to contend with, an intro that seems lifted from a
different movie, and unexciting, undersea battles with the Nazis. I hate to
play guest director, but Below would have been much more effective with minimum
material. The fear wouldn’t be so distilled. Get rid of the castaways and the
Germans. First, detail the Americans triumphant defeat of the Nazis. Then have
our boys humming Benny Goodman songs and talking about getting a slice of apple
pie with their girls. Finally, introduce the spooky presence and let the bodies
start dropping, while identifiable characters (who we’ve actually gotten to
know beforehand) try to end the evil.
If anything else, we might actually get to gasp again.
The DVD adds deleted scenes and a director's commentary to the mix.
Olivia's goin' down.
Reviewer: Pete Croatto
The only thing missing from this movie was the hook...
Individuals not aware as to the term "Hook", well, remember the typical talent
contest when a lousy contestant performed?
Yes, the hook would come out and grab the bum, with a fast and abrupt tug the
bum is pulled off stage!
A silly, dumb movie with absolutely no vision, basically this donk of a movie
is a rehash of between 3 - 5 old movies smashed together; no continuity!
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