The Happening Movie Review
The Happening Review

"The Happening" Overview

Rating: R
2008
Cast and Crew
Director : M. Night ShyamalanProducer : M. Night Shyamalan
Screenwiter : M. Night Shyamalan
Starring : Mark Wahlberg,Zooey Deschanel,John Leguizamo,Ashlyn Sanchez,Betty Buckley
You know that co-worker that comes in after a long, uneventful weekend and insists
upon telling you every dull detail of his equally uninteresting escapades? You know
he thinks he's captivating, with a great story to tell, but you'd rather shove something s
harp into your ears than listen to another minute of his banal ramblings? That's
a lot like The Happening, one of the worst attempts at end-of-the-world ominousness since
the Robot Holocaust battled the Ninja Apocalypse (and yes -- those are both actual
movies).
One beautiful fall morning, all activity in New York's Central Park suddenly stops.
Soon, people are cutting their own throats and stabbing themselves to death. Downtown,
workers at an office building throw themselves off in a lemming-like mass suicide.
In Philadelphia, science teacher Elliot Moore (Mark Wahlberg), his wife Alma (Zooey
Deschanel), their best friend Julian (John Leguizamo), and his daughter Jess (Ashlyn
Sanchez) all decide to head to the countryside to avoid the city -- and the source
of the so-called attack. Soon, rumors begin flying of terrorist involvement, while
others think the local nuclear power plant may be responsible. All anyone really
knows is that the psychological virus is spreading and no one appears immune... or
safe.
It's official: M. Night Shyamalan is no longer the next Spielberg. At this rate he
won't even be the next Ray Dennis Steckler. After the stellar Sixth Sense and the equally
excellent Unbreakable, he's managed a downward spiral that few on his Tinseltown
trek could survive. Sure, Signs made money, and The Village has its defenders, but after
the calamitous Lady in the Water, it was commercial do or die for the 38-year-old. So
he responded to said challenge by delivering a cockamamie concept involving the end
of the world (or at least the Eastern seaboard of the United States part of it) and
how a diminishing group of ethnically mixed individuals deal with all the death and destruction.
Frankly, they don't take it very well -- and neither will the audience. Instead of
scares (which are all telegraphed in the various trailers bubbling around the web)
we get unintentional laughs. Instead of thought provoking sci-fi speculation, we
get the Alan Titchmarsh version of Armageddon. On the plus side, there's no "twist"
here, Shyamalan is thankfully abandoning the trademark that frequently flummoxed
his narrative structure. Here, conjecture runs rampant, but within the first 30 minutes,
Wahlberg and company settle on a single theory. Not to spoil it here, but let's just say
it's not nice to fool with Mother Nature. It's the least compelling element in a
film already hampered by unexceptional casting and dialogue driven by exclamations,
not explanations.
Besides, Shyamalan scrimps on the good stuff. We never really experience the breakdown
of society; the random events that do occur -- occasional power outages, incomplete
radio transmission, speculative new reports -- fail to cause anything other than
ennui. The onscreen deaths don't go far enough, holding back on both the horror and
gore. Our survivors are mere pawns, required to do no more than stop, yammer, then
simply push on, trying to vainly outrun a threat they barely comprehend. The cast
tries heroically to infuse meaning into vague, unfocused lines, and there is a last
act appearance by a psychotic recluse (played by Betty Buckley) that changes the
entire tone into something akin to a backwoods exploitation effort.
In fact, The Happening is very much like the basic made-on-the-cheap B-movie schlock that
took up residence at your '50s/'60s passion pit. Of course, keeping company with
Ray Kellogg and Bert I. Gordon won't guarantee you placement in cinema's Hall of
Fame. Hall of Shame is more like it -- which is exactly where this boring movie and
its maker belong.
We'll just wait here 'til the movie's over.
Reviewer: Bill Gibron





