The Wicker Man (2006) Movie Review
The Wicker Man (2006) Review

"The Wicker Man (2006)" Overview

Rating: PG-13
2006
Cast and Crew
Director : Neil LaButeProducer : Joanne Sellar,Avi Lerner,Norman Golightly,Randall Emmett,Nicolas Cage
Screenwiter : Neil LaBute
Starring : Nicolas Cage,Kate Beahan,Ellen Burstyn,Frances Conroy,Leelee Sobieski
The new version of The Wicker Man is a surprisingly tony addition to the new
class of horror remakes, adapted and directed not by a disgraced former action
director or a newbie music-video director but arthouse mainstay Neil LaBute;
starring not a WB star paying his or her dues, but Nicolas Cage.
I haven't seen the original Wicker Man (or read the novel on which it was
based), but apparently the major change to the story – about a cop visiting a
remote island commune to investigate the disappearance of a young girl – is,
appropriate to LaBute's resume (In the Company of Men, The Shape of Things), a
gender switch. Whereas the original island was overseen by Christopher Lee,
this one has Ellen Burstyn as Sister Summersisle, who oversees a flock of women
conducting themselves with creepy calm. Men are present, in tiny clusters, but
seem resigned mainly to lifting things in silence.
Edward Malus (Cage) is summoned to the island by his long-missing
ex-girlfriend, now Sister Willow (Kate Beahan), who is convinced that her young
daughter has been abducted by someone on the island. In a show of sisterly
solidarity, the other Sisters refuse to acknowledge the missing girl's
existence; in a show of manly stoicism (or is it deference?), the men say
nothing.
Cage initially seems to be in Hollywood everyman mode as the haunted cop, but,
as the movie's main man, he has the space to give a typically unboring
performance, as Malus becomes equally pompous and frustrated during his
investigation. It's one of the movie's best details that Malus isn't really a
detective, but a highway patrolman who doesn't seem to know much about real
investigations; he flashes his badge, barks questions, and does his best to
coarsen up this would-be utopia. The women look cold and prim, and have none of
it.
It's not clear what point LaBute is trying to make with Malus's clumsy
masculinity or the women's smug avoidance; keeping his past work in mind, he
most likely takes them all as creeps of some kind or another.
But if LaBute has odd, creepy fun with Cage, he has a lot less luck with the
movie itself – with horror-film musts like, say, suspense, or scares. The rest
of the characters pop in and out of the movie, taking turns glowering or
quavering in Cage's presence, and LaBute's dialogue sounds stuck in playwright
mode – stiff and overly precise. In his dramas and dark comedies, LaBute's
characters speak with undertones and overtones of menace; when faced with an
actual horror movie, that menace doesn't break the surface. Instead, the movie
has a lot of halfhearted conversations and pedestrian bits from the horror
playbook: Cage sneaking around at night; Cage having disturbing visions; Cage
flipping out towards a twist ending (preserved from the original I'm told) that
(in this case) raises as many questions as it answers.
It's a shame, because LaBute's bloody gender battles could make a fine garnish
to the routine of modern horror; he should take another shot someday (keeping
Cage around couldn't hurt). His Wicker Man, 2006 style, has plenty of
superficial intrigue and potential interpretations, but nothing there in the
middle to connect those ends. The whole movie is a wicker doll – competently
constructed and empty in the middle.
Fish heads, fish heads, roly poly fish heads.
Reviewer: Jesse Hassenger





