Mirrors Movie Review
Mirrors Review
"Mirrors" Overview

Rating: R
2008
Cast and Crew
Director : Alexandre AjaProducer : Alexandre Aja,Gregory Levasseur,Alexandra Milchan,Marc Sternberg,Moritz von der Groeben
Screenwiter : Alexandre Aja,Gregory Levasseur
Starring : Kiefer Sutherland,Paula Patton,Amy Smart,Cameron Boyce,Mary Beth Peil
Writer-director Alexandre Aja, along with his co-writer Gregory Levasseur, had been
cruising along, showing promise within the horror genre, until (cue overwrought score)
the mirrors got hold of him. Their film Mirrors is another remake of an Asian horror
movie imbuing everyday objects with ghostly menace. In this case, the objects are,
yes, mirrors -- specifically (but not limited to) the mirrors in a run-down New York
department store. Of course, jump-scares involving sudden appearances in mirrors have been
a cheap horror tactic for years, so this is a little like making a horror movie about
murderous loud noises.
Ben (Kiefer Sutherland) is a newly-hired night security guard at that department
store, and during his patrols he's been seeing disturbing stuff in the mirrors --
charred bodies, horrible wounds, people screaming for help. This seems like an excellent
time to slack a bit at work and hang back in his security trailer, but Ben persists
with an investigation.
Before he actually gets anywhere, we spend a lot of time with the Sutherland character,
who seems frustrated over his inability to torture his way through this wan mystery.
His grim overacting recalls eighties action heroes, with a pinch of Shatner thrown in for
good measure, as he anguishes over his estranged wife and kids. The idea is that
no one believes this disgraced cop and recovering alcoholic when he talks about the
evil mirrors, but the movie doesn't bother with a shred of ambiguity to make all
of the yelling and emoting more interesting for the audience. Eventually other characters
realize Ben is telling the truth, and the story picks up a little, but only halfheartedly.
Apart from a bit of creepy imagery, Mirrors is tedious, and an odd choice for a director
whose movies, good or bad, tend to set their sights far over the top. Stripped of
much of his usual energy and viscera, Aja doesn't appear to have much facility for
character-driven suspense -- he simply punctuates the slow-creep-plus-jump-scare formula
with a handful of his trademark grotesqueries.
This places the movie in a strange realm between turgid PG-13 horror and excessive
R-rated gorehounding, where the former shakes itself awake with a little of the latter.
It's actually rated R but, unlike Aja's previous films, it doesn't seem fully committe
d, like an "unrated" DVD version of itself. Or maybe it's like an evil reflection
of itself in a haunted mirror that causes the original movie to cut itself up. If
that sounds even remotely spooky, Mirrors still probably won't do much for you.
Seven more years of bad movies.
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Review by Jesse Hassenger
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