Valentine Movie Review
Valentine Review

"Valentine" Overview

Rating: R
2001
Cast and Crew
Director : Jamie BlanksProducer : Dylan Sellers
Screenwiter : Donna Powers,Wayne Powers,Gretchen J. Berg,Aaron Harberts
Starring : David Boreanaz,Denise Richards,Marley Shelton,Jessica Capshaw,Jessica Cauffiel,Katherine Heigl,Fulvio Cecere,Daniel Cosgrove,Johnny Whitworth
Well, here's something that will make you wish you'd stayed home to watch
Survivor instead of shelling out money at the movies. Hell, Valentine, another
entry into the yearly, winter horror crapfest, even makes Temptation Island
look good.
What we've got here is your standard grade horror flick in the vein of Scream
and Urban Legend, revolving around a mysterious killer devising a supposed
revenge plot -- a geeky kid who got a Carrie pulled on him in 6th grade. My
how the tables have turned! The bunch of girls who refused to dance with him
are now getting killed, 13 years later. Has this nobody returned from
obscurity to exact his revenge for having punch poured on him?
We'll have one med school coed get pinched during a midnight autopsy. And of
course she will hide in a body bag in a futile attempt to escape the man in the
Cupid mask -- who's naturally doing his marauding on Valentine's Day. We'll
see all manner of stabbings, shootings, beheadings, boilings, and whatnot --
until 90 minutes later the killer is unmasked.
The film presents us an oh-so-clever puzzler -- is it the 6th grader come back
to haunt the girls? Is it one of their dates? Another man from the past? The
cop? Or maybe it's the fisherman they ran over and left for dead on a winding
road. The possibilities are as endless as they are random.
Valentine is headlined by actresses Denise Richards and Marley Shelton (who,
with this and Sugar & Spice, appears to be on the Molly Ringwald road to career
suicide), plus a gaggle of totally unknown supporting actresses whose only
requirement for appearance appears to have been having very large breasts.
(And despite this there's no nudity in the film at all!)
David Boreanaz joins the ladies in a truly pathetic role, stumbling through his
lines like he has a hangover. No surprise: His character is a recovering
alcoholic.
Prefaced by stern and multiple verbal warnings that Valentine is "very scary
and very intense," sadly, we find the only very that applies to this film is
very stupid. Simply, thrills are utterly lacking in the film. The murders are
fully expected, unoriginal, and lacking in even the most basic sense of horror.
And Cupid makes for a stalker about as frightening as Mary Poppins.
Maybe the only thing dumber than the film itself is the fact that it took four
screenwriters to bicker over the writing credit. Now that's horror.
You're a mean one, Ms. Richards.
Reviewer: Christopher Null





