What happens after we die? Is there truly an
afterlife with a white light at the end of a long, dark tunnel? These
existential questions have plagued humanity for millennia, but perhaps
science has finally caught up with our desire to know the truth of
existence. A reimagining of the 1990 film directed by Joel Schumacher,
Niels Arden Oplev's Flatliners attempts to answer all of our
questions about life after death, but while the movie works on a
technical and performance level, its cheap scares and contrived plot do
little to move the dial forward for the horror genre.
Neither a direct sequel nor a full-blown remake, Flatliners
takes the core idea established by the 1990 original and updates it
with a new cast of characters for a new generation. Haunted by a
(possibly preventable) car crash that took the life of her younger
sister nine years earlier, Courtney (Ellen Page) is a talented medical
student who spends her evenings secretly studying the mystery of the
afterlife. Discovering a possible path to experience the afterlife for
brief stretches of time, Courtney enlists the help of fellow students
Ray (Diego Luna), Marlo (Nina Dobrev), Sophia (Kiersey Clemons), and
Jamie (James Norton) to kill her for one minute and then bring her back.
As a result of this bold experiment, the students not only find a path
to the afterlife, but they fundamentally rewire their brains to unlock
the cognitive potential that they never thought was possible. The
downside? They bring something evil back from the other side with them
that wants to punish them for their sins.
2017 has seen some great horror movies debut -- whether it is Annabelle: Creation, It, or Get Out. Sadly, we cannot place the Flatliners
update among those ranks. Yes, Niels Arden Oplev capably helms the
sequel-boot from a purely visual standpoint. That said, while there are a
few legitimately creepy sequences (such as one involving a ghostly
little girl drawing by candlelight), Flatliners boils down to a
series of fake-out jump scares scattered throughout a relatively
predictable narrative, and culminates in a rushed climax that simply
doesn't pay off the preceding story in an emotionally satisfying way.
There's quite a bit of style here, but minimal substance.
As a result, while Flatliners opens
quickly and commendably gets to the point almost immediately, the film
loses its momentum once the concept of "flatlining" has been fully
explained and fleshed out. Because of this, the second act mostly boils
down to a series of haunts shared between each of the four main
characters that go through with the procedure. Like the steady flow of a
pulse on a heartbeat monitor, Flatliners eventually becomes so
predictable that you can almost anticipate which of these young doctors
will be the next to find themselves visited by a demonic apparition
before it even happens.
In a certain sense, it almost feels like Flatliners
has one hand unfortunately tied behind its back by its need to stick
within the horror genre. This reimagining expands on the premise of the
original by positing that flatlining enhances the cognitive function of
these stressed out and overworked medical students. It creates an
interesting Limitless-esque framework to explore how these
characters can become fixated to this dangerous game (drug and addiction
motifs play a significant role in the story), but those compelling
ideas are sidestepped to focus on the scares. It's a shame, because what
could've been a deeper examination of the original's core premise
mostly just devolves into a retread that struggles to justify its
existence.
The more notable issue that plagues the film's
ensemble is the fact that script does not afford the actors much to do
in their respective roles. What we need to know about any of the five
core doctors is usually summed up by a comment made about them
("Medicine comes easy to you," for example), and we're not given much of
a reason to root for them or care about what's happening. Their
rationale for taking part in the flatlining procedure is inherently
selfish from the get-go, and the added layer of their sins coming back
to haunt them ultimately makes it hard even to want to root for most of
them to make it out of the film alive.
Despite that issue, if there are two shining lights in Flatliners, they would have to be Diego Luna and Ellen Page. Even when Flatliners'
script does not give them much to do, they milk the material for all it
is worth and deliver the two best performances in the movie. Page
deserves particular credit, as she throws herself into Courtney's
obsessed nature and really lets loose when the character realizes what
she has unleashed. It just would've been nice to see a more compelling
story constructed around the heroine.
Though competently directed and well-acted, Flatliners
does little to set itself apart from a run-of-the-mill thriller. True
to the material, it simply lacks a pulse. On a superficial level, the
film will most likely deliver the requisite scares (albeit cheap jump
scares) to enter the Halloween season, but it probably will fail to
leave a lasting impression.
Read more >> American Made Review
Read more >> American Made Review
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