‘Happening’ shocks, then bores
For a movie called “The Happening,” not much happens.
M. Night Shyamalan effectively delivers the usual broody air of foreboding that has been a trademark of his hits (“The Sixth Sense” and “Signs”) and misses (“Lady in the Water” and “Unbreakable”).
And this fear-mongering story of an airborne toxin that causes victims to snuff themselves in nasty ways — shoving hairpins into their throats, hurling themselves en masse off a high rise, the like — induces plenty of seat-squirming. The shock value wears off quickly, though, and writer-director Shyamalan strands us (along with Mark Wahlberg and Zooey Deschanel) in an ultimately boring cautionary tale with an infantile eco-message.
Thankfully, Shyamalan’s not trying to pull great surprises anymore. He sneaked up on us brilliantly with an ending to “The Sixth Sense” that made just about everyone want to see it again.
Since then, his attempts to startle mostly have been flimsy gimmicks, though the end to “The Village,” while not terribly surprising, packed provocative notions about creating your own monsters while trying to shield yourself from the horrors of the world at large.
In “The Happening,” those horrors land abruptly and mysteriously as crowds in
By way of lame explanation, a TV news talking head babbles some scientific nonsense about a substance that blocks the brain’s self-preservation neurotransmitters.
At first, it’s assumed this is a terrorist attack. But as the day wears on, observers realize — none too plausibly, given the skimpy anecdotal evidence and utter lack of empirical validation — that our green friends in the plant world are the source of some deadly toxin.
Philly science teacher Elliot Moore (Wahlberg) and wife Alma (Deschanel) flee the city by train along with his buddy Julian (John Leguizamo) and his 8-year-old daughter, Jess (Ashlyn Sanchez).
Stranded in rural
From here, “The Happening” deflates from its grisly, early promise to repetitive images of people running through Gradually, “The Happening” turns weird for the sake of turning weird as Elliot and Alma take refuge with a crazy old woman (Betty Buckley, the step-mom from “Eight Is Enough” — remember her?).
Shyamalan manages to keep in check the overactive ego that led him to take on tiny roles a la an Alfred Hitchcock walk-on in some movies — and the all-out narcissism he displayed by casting himself as a writer whose book will be the basis of humanity’s salvation in “Lady in the Water.”
He does slip himself into “The Happening,” though, providing the phone voice of a man with whom
The movie’s vague, shame-on-us finger-pointing would have been tepid in the 1960s and ‘70s, when
Shyamalan states that the idea for “The Happening” — the entire structure and the characters — came to him in an instant as he drove through rural New Jersey and was hit by the thought, “What if nature one day turned on us?”
Fine, nice start. But all Shyamalan ever came up with is a start, an intriguing impetus for a story that ultimately goes nowhere and says nothing.
“The Happening,” a 20th Century Fox release, is rated R for violent and disturbing images. Running time: 91 minutes. Two stars out of four. (AP)
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