Wednesday, May 19, 2021

The New Movie From One Of My Favorite Writer/Directors

 

Those Who Wish Me Dead

Gillipedia Official Rating: We didn’t start the fire


          If you haven’t heard of the name Taylor Sheridan before, I can’t blame you. He’s relatively new to the scene, and despite having some acting credits, his most significant contributions have been from behind the camera. Most notably, he wrote the Denis Villeneuve directed film Sicario. He followed that up with the critically acclaimed Hell or High Water (he also very recently co-wrote the Prime film Tom Clancy’s Without Remorse starring Michael B. Jordan). After that, he took over directing duties himself and made Wind River. There’s definitely a signature look with all of these films. Usually pretty intense, these films to varying degrees have solid action mixed with interesting landscapes and locales. The same goes for his newest film.

          Another trait among Sheridan’s films (particularly Hell or High Water) is the opposite of what you see in horror films—smart characters make smart decisions. Sometimes these are bigger pieces of the plot, but most of the time, they are heat of the moment types of actions that simply make sense. Relatively early on in Those Who Wish Me Dead is a car crash with a dad and his son. The dad is fatally injured and wants to ensure there’s no trace of his son. He opens the passenger door, the kid gets out, and the dad closes the door shut again. I swear to you if the same scenario happened in a basic slasher film, that passenger side door would be wide open and tip off the villain that there was another passenger. One more example: the villains of the film take a hostage as they search for some characters. They reach an abandoned firetower where the only way up is to climb up a ladder. They send the hostage up the tower, and if he finds anyone up there, he needs to bring them down. If there’s no one in there, he needs to set a fire in the middle of the room and burn the place down to prove there’s no one in there. It’s a scenario that is well-planned from the villains and provides true intrigue and worry over what the hostage will do if he finds anybody in the tower.

          As for the story to the kind of vague title of this movie, it’s like a mix of Only the Brave with Wind River. Our main star is the ageless Angelina Jolie who works with the parks department as a firefighter and gets assigned a firetower to keep watch over. At the same time, there’s a father who uncovers some information that he shouldn’t have, and people want him dead for it. The father escapes with his son, and they head to the only people they can trust—friends of Jolie. As the bad guys close in and all paths intertwine, a fire in the forest will act as the catalyst to everything.

          Let’s talk about the cast because for a film that I feel like has had little promotion, there’s some big names here. The two main bad guys are English actors playing Americans—you have Lord Baelish from Game of Thrones, and you have the blueist-eyed actor in Nicholas Hoult. Jolie’s friends are The Punisher actor Jon Bernthal playing a cop, and his wife, someone I haven’t heard of but she gets a couple really cool moments to shine. I should also mention that the kid here isn’t a terrific actor, but he’s good enough. Oh and Tyler Perry makes an appearance for approximately one scene. To his credit it’s a good performance, but it’s so brief that he isn’t even credited with top billing.

          Prominently featured in the trailer is a big forest fire that starts about halfway through and obviously makes its way to the climax of the film. It’s well utilized, but if the shot lingers on it for a little too long, you start to recognize the same animation and the color palette is too similar and that’s when you can tell that it’s CGI. That’s right, bet you people didn’t know I was an expert when it comes to visual effects too.

          The final fight is a little disappointing. The villains start feeling more desperate and don’t make as smart of choices as the beginning of the film. And it all ends up with mostly a fistfight. Yes, the fire does get used, but I think they could’ve used more of the cat-and-mouse tactics from earlier in the film and ramped it up with the fire for a still exciting conclusion that wasn’t a basic close combat fight.

          Sheridan does a fine job directing, but I’d take all of his works previously mentioned over this film. I’d describe this as fine entertainment, but you don’t need to bother going too far out of your way to see it.

 

In Brief:

  • It’s finally happening. A Quiet Place Part 2 comes out at the end of the month. The first one was an amazing experience in theaters, and I’m incredibly excited for this film as well.
  • Mortal Kombat has some cringey moments and bad acting, but all in all, it was entertaining. Solid visuals, nice callbacks to the games (like the way the fights are framed), and some actual solid martial arts.
  • I watched the Marvel movie nobody knows about. The New Mutants is like 10 Cloverfield Lane and Glass. Teenage mutants in a psych ward they can’t leave. Pretty lowkey with some interesting characters and ideas, but it should’ve embraced horror more. Plus, the twist of the film is obvious after the first 20 minutes. It’s PG-13, and I definitely believe that was a mistake. Considering its poor performance, this appears to be a one and done. I’m happy for the experiment, but the results left me with something to be desired.
  • Guardians of the Galaxy and Jumanji star Karen Gillan stars in Oculus, and her ability to do an American accent is so good that I had no idea it was her the entire film. It also stars the guy who plays Robin in the weird new Titans show. Anyways, I was enjoying the film all the way up until the ending. Hated that ending. Not satisfying. But, it’s still a better than average horror film.

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