Shape of Water: A
pietistic bore readymade for those searching only to reinforce their
worldviews, with cursory caricatures rather than living/breathing characters.
Shannon’s zealous goon is laughably empty, the type of strawman scoundrel that real
life goons are sure to hate without seeing any attribute of themselves reflected back. Don’t even get
me started on his wife and kids. The creature is similarly shapeless and nondescript,
just another messiah to suffer our sins. Spare me the shabby platitudes. The
road to Oscar glory is paved with good intentions.
A Quiet Place: It’s hard to not hold this whole Krasinskian
notion that horror needs elevation against this movie. He cites Get Out, Don’t
Breathe, The Witch, and The Babadook as modern examples of the genre being classed
up (or at least that’s how I’m interpreting). To be fair, it seems he’s saying
that these movies plugged this unlikely naïf into the genre, the gateway drugs to
the depths where the good stuff hangs around. A Quiet Place opens with a family
inaudibly rummaging for food and supplies in an abandoned rural market, the
scene ends with an accidental death, one that leaves each character with a
generous amount of fear and guilt and limited resources to air them out. Despite
all of this, the parents decide to conceive a child, without a failsafe plan
for either giving birth or anything thereafter. I normally wouldn’t give a shit
about this type of oversight but it was written into the plot and therefore I
think it’s fair to question both the logic (at least) of such a decision. If
you’ve witnessed your young child being eaten by a monster why risk the same
fate for the other two kids? Krasinski poses the question; if you can’t protect
kids, why have them in the first place? If only the movie could hang its hat on
this. It can’t. Being an “elevated” horror film has its pratfalls and sometimes
packing half-cooked ideas and metaphors into what should/could be an otherwise
streamlined thriller plot about survival and parenthood is a curse in disguise.
There are suddenly new itches to scratch and not enough hands. Krasinksi doesn’t
fuss over the details that led to this invasion. He spares us exposition,
coddling us instead with a goofy whiteboard that leads to an inadvertently
funny finale where a character’s disability conveniently unlocks the method of vanquishing
of these CGI beasts. This segues to my main problem with A Quiet Place, the
monsters aren’t scary. To my recollection, I have yet to be truly scared of any
creatures composed by a computer. Frankly, I’m curious as to how anyone could
be. What good are you if you can’t scare us?
I hate Shape of Water for all of the reasons that you cite, but I also think it's the best of the bunch that you review in this post. Del Toro at least has a fantastic visual imagination. There are visual elements of Shape that are strong and iconic. I think that the film would work (and maybe even be better) as a silent film.
ReplyDeleteI agree about A Quiet Place. Somewhat ridiculously, it's my favorite film of 2018 right now, but only because it hit the spot at Cinema Saver when I needed something entertaining. Isle of Dogs is the superior film in almost every way, but A Quiet Place nevertheless hit me stronger despite its oh-so-many flaws.
3 Billboards is indeed stupid, but it has some great performances. I want to like all of McDonagh's stuff more than I do.