Sat 26 Oct 2024
A Movie Review by Jonathan Lewis: TRAP (2024).
Posted by Steve under Horror movies , Reviews[4] Comments
TRAP. Warner Brothers, 2024. Josh Hartnett, Ariel Donoghue, Saleka Night Shyamalan, Alison Pill, Hayley Mills. Written & directed by M. Night Shyamalan.
Picture it: a middle-aged man and his pre-teen daughter are at a pop music concert. The performer in question, one Lady Raven, is on the top of her game and has legions of devoted fans. Then imagine the middle-aged man starts noticing something is off-kilter; there are simply way too many police around. What might be going on?
That’s the premise of Trap, a recent film from prolific director M. Night Shyamalan. Josh Hartnett, whose performance carries the film, stars as Cooper, a seemingly normal guy from the Philadelphia suburbs. As it turns out, he is far from normal. In fact, he’s “The Butcher,” a serial killer that has been stalking the city. And the concert? Well, that’s an elaborate trap that has been set for him.
Now, that might sound like a ludicrous premise. But trust me: when it works, it works. As a suspense flick filmed with a sense of fun and one that fortunately doesn’t take itself too seriously, Trap is an above average escapist thriller.
It’s important to remember that screenplays need to be original, but not too original. They can’t be so off the beaten path as to confuse audiences. There’s a reason why genres and subgenres have tropes. Trap succeeds in being both a familiar “serial killer” movie and something entirely new. While it might not be palatable to all tastes, there’s a lot here to appreciate. For the squeamish, don’t worry. The movie relies on suspense rather than gore to get its point across.
October 26th, 2024 at 8:34 pm
Interesting premise and nice to see Mills in a major role as the cop in charge.
October 26th, 2024 at 10:49 pm
Quite a premise indeed. A juggling act, in fact. All through the first hour of the movie I was wondering how Shyamalan was ever going to reconcile the loving if not doting father with the fact that he’s also a monstrous serial killer. He does, I think, but there’s a lot of wiggle room left over for anyone who’s still a doubter at film’s end. Not me, but wiggle room nonetheless.
As for Hayley Mills, yes! I hadn’t realized she was still making movies. She’s been in them in since the late 50s. I believe she was 12 at the time.
October 27th, 2024 at 8:42 am
As a father who took his pre-teen daughters to concerts way back in the day (including Milli Vanilli!), I suppose I should try this one, although I gave up on Shyamalan after his ludicrous alien-invasion picture with Mel Gibson.
October 27th, 2024 at 11:23 am
I too find a good amount of Shyamalan’s work hard to take, but the father-daughter rapport at the concert in this film is very nearly pitch perfect.