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The Reaping Movie Review
The Reaping Review

"The Reaping" Overview

Rating: R
2007
Cast and Crew
Director : Stephen HopkinsProducer : Erik Olsen,Steve Richards,Bruce Berman
Screenwiter : Carey Hayes,Chad Hayes
Starring : Hilary Swank,AnnaSophia Robb,David Morrissey,Idris Elba,Stephen Rea
Trouble sleeping? Try The Reaping. As Stephen Hopkins' sinfully boring devil
dance continues creeping, at your watch you'll be peeping. By the time you
reach the preposterous conclusion, where a sequel-establishing twist looms like
a Biblical plague, for humanity you'll be weeping.
You'll need more than faith to accept the film's ridiculous premise, cooked up
by sibling screenwriters Carey and Chad Hayes. These two can't distinguish
between horrifying and horrible. They last collaborated on the dreadful House
of Wax remake starring Paris Hilton. Enough said.
Once an ordained minister, Katherine Winter (Hilary Swank) now dedicates her
professional life to debunking the modern miracle -- a tragic loss has shaken
her faith in the existence of God. Katherine's skepticism keeps her at arm's
length from former colleague Father Costigan (Stephen Rea), who detects
unmistakable signs that Katherine's life is in danger. Ignoring the clergyman's
passionate warnings, she springs into investigative mode after the Bible-Belt
town of Haven, located a short drive from Katherine's Louisiana office space
(very convenient), starts experiencing the first of 10 legendary plagues.
Doug (David Morrissey), the local science teacher, shares Katherine's belief
that there's a reasonable explanation why the nearby river flows blood red and
frogs are falling from the sky. But the fanatical townsfolk, carved straight
from Hollywood's testament of stock southern stereotypes, place the blame on
12-year-old Loren McConnell (AnnaSophia Robb), the blonde-haired and barefoot
spawn of an inbred family hell bent on sacrificing all second-born children in
the Bayou neighborhood.
Swank holds her head high and keeps her chin stiff as the cynic poking her
finger through the film's visible seams. We half expect her, at any minute, to
deduce with the confidence of Nancy Drew what's causing this movie to stink so
badly.
She's not alone. Co-star Idris Elba's welcome sarcasm slices through the film's
overly serious tone. He plays Ben, Katherine's street-smart (or, in this case,
swamp-smart) assistant whose unshakable convictions keep him in the game. He's
far more interesting than Morrissey, who has an odd "hula, hula" delivery to
his leaden lines that reminds me of a young Elvis Presley.
What's really causing these supposed disasters? The Hayes brothers burden Swank
with numerous dry speeches about scientific explanations and the history of
faux plagues. Stimulating lectures have no place in jolting thrillers, however,
and the dull Reaping slowly deflates like a balloon that has been pin-pricked.
Of course, we're supposed to suspect much darker causes. To paraphrase Dana
Carvey's Church Lady character, "Could it be… Satan?"
Granted, my Old Testament knowledge is rusty, but I believe the devil has more
weapons at his (or her) disposal when terrifying non-believers than creaking
doors, whistling tea kettles, and power outages in the dead of night. Where's
the fire? Where's the brimstone? Hopkins unleashes waves of locusts and
pint-sized meteors late in the game, but his digital creations set horror
effects back about three decades.
Actually, that's not entirely true. If we turn the page back 30 years, we find
William Friedkin's unsurpassed The Exorcist, which dragged a teenage girl
through the demonic ringer in more convincing fashion. Exorcist did more with a
can of pea soup than Reaping could do with its entire effects budget. If
anything, Hopkins' hideous film reminds us why Friedkin's masterpiece remains,
to this day, the most horrifying movie ever made.
Commence the picking.
Reviewer: Sean O'Connell
i liked the main idae of the film, the idea of " losing and regaining faith"
the idea of believing in miracles.
the film is about true believing and that wherever far we go there's always a
way back only if we start to look around and understand what is going on
what is nice about that movie is that it reflects the main idea of faith from
the begining which was easily understood.
the movie was full of suspense with unexpected end and that gives the movie its
greatness
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