Signs Movie Review
Signs Review

"Signs" Overview

Rating: PG-13
2002
Cast and Crew
Director : M. Night ShyamalanProducer : Frank Marshall,Sam Mercer,M. Night Shyamalan
Screenwiter : M. Night Shyamalan
Starring : Mel Gibson,Joaquin Phoenix,Rory Culkin,Abigail Breslin
Crop circles: real or hoax? M. Night Shyamalan (of the masterful The Sixth
Sense and the iffy Unbreakable) stabs at answering that question in the quite
good Signs, inspired by patterns found in the cornfields of Pennsylvania. (And
yes, it turns out they really do grow a lot of corn up there.)
While you might be expecting a cool-headed mystery about the origins of crop
circles, Signs is actually a bizarre mix of V, Independence Day, and Panic
Room. Even stranger, it's actually watchable, though at times I was ready to
slap Mel Gibson for his stilted performance, which frequently drags down the
movie as he pontificates.
The story unfolds on a corn farm where Gibson's Graham Hess (a former minister
who has left the church in the wake of his wife's death) raises his two kids
with the help of his brother Merrill (Joaquin Phoenix). If you're ready to
believe that Phoenix (27) is a brother of Gibson (46), you've got the ability
to suspend disbelief for what happens next. Eventually crop circles appear,
and the Hess's dismiss them as the work of local pranksters, but soon enough
the evidence becomes overwhelming: Aliens are coming. When lights appear in
the sky over hundreds of worldwide cities, the Hess family boards up the
farmhouse and hides in the cellar, fending off the invasion.
After one of the worst examples of opening credits I've ever seen and a lengthy
and misleading exposition, I was ready to give up on Signs altogether. Would
this be another "why must we fear outsiders?" piece of paranoia, the kind of
movie that went out of style during the Red Scare? If aliens are clueless
enough to have to draw giant markers all over the world as "directions" for
their spaceships, their "superior intellect" becomes circumspect. (And indeed,
the more I think about it, the more preposterous the plot becomes.) But
Shyamalan soon wisely dumps his crop circle fetish for real thrills and horror
when the creepy aliens start showing up in person.
In some of the most inventive and spine-tingling scenes I've ever seen in a
sci-fi film, we watch on TV as a home video camera catches a blurry glimpse of
an alien at a child's birthday party. When Gibson faces down one of the beasts
through a locked pantry door, my skin absolutely crawled. Even if it did look
like a skinny guy in green Spandex, I still get the chills just thinking about
it.
Masterful use of suspense isn't all the movie has going for it. Phoenix
positively owns this movie, acting circles (no pun intended) around his
bigger-name co-star and standing out as fundamentally the only character to
whom the audience can relate. Eat the kids, I say, as long as Joaquin makes it
out alive.
As for the question as to whether Shyamalan has injected his now-trademark
surprise ending, the answer is "not really." There is a moment of minor
revelation, but it's tangential to the story. In other words, Mel Gibson is
not a ghost.
Signs is quite unexpected, not that it's particularly inventive in story (it
really is Panic Room on a farm, with aliens), dialogue ("That's how these
things were done in the past…"), or character (a kid's asthma creates a crisis
when his inhaler is lost… sound familiar?). But it does have that rare quality
of being able to creep the living hell out of you, filling a theater of jaded
movie fans with screams of terror, all hoping that tonight -- please -- don't
let the aliens come after ME.
The Signs DVD features about five minutes of deleted scenes (no more spooky
alien critters, alas), a lengthy making-of documentary with commentaries, and
another stellar film from Night's youth -- wherein a robot wearing a Halloween
mask slowly chases Night through his living room. Yipes!
Daddy needs a shave.
Reviewer: Christopher Null





