| 'The Happening'
Reviewed by Martin McGrath
I’d
been there before with M Night Shyamalan’s movies.
Once again we had terrible reviews and disastrous early word
of mouth warning audiences off what, in the past, had always
turned out to be better than average science fiction/horror
films that ask more of the audience than slack-jawed staring
at the screen. Unbreakable, Signs, The Village even
the universally scorned Lady in the Water, I have
enjoyed them all. So I proceeded to my seat for The Happening
confident that as usual I would emerge singing the praises
of a misunderstood director who seems condemned to spend the
rest of his career expected, by audience and critics, to remake
The Sixth Sense.
How wrong I was.
It isn’t that Shyamalan’s talents have entirely
deserted him. An eerily effective opening sequence and the
smart way he uses the rolling green plains around Philadelphia
demonstrate that as a creator of images, Shyamalan remains
a potent and interesting director.
But The Happening fails in almost every other respect.
The
film starts in New York where, spreading out from Central
Park, people start killing themselves in vast numbers. At
first terrorists are blamed, but it quickly becomes clear
this is a natural phenomenon that is spreading fast. In Philadelphia
Elliot (Wahlberg), his wife Alma (Deschanel), brother Julian
(Leguizamo) and niece Jess (Sanchez) escape the city by train
but are left stranded in the countryside. Leguizamo is sidelined
to search for his wife, while Wahlberg, realising that the
event is attacking large groups and speculating that plants
are responsible, leads his wife and niece across country.
To say that the script is clunky would be to offer the highest
possible insult to clunkers. There are exchanges here, especially
in the moments where people are supposed to be sharing moments
of intimacy (and especially emerging from the mouth of Zooey
Deschanel – an actress without discernable talent) during
which I succumbed to a physical need to put my hands over
my ears just to avoid hearing what was bound to come next.
The words emerging from the mouths of these characters grate
like nails on a blackboard.
And then there is Shyamalan’s attempt to introduce
a thematic resonance to his story. Here, we see science and
faith placed side by side and utterly muddled. Elliot (Wahlberg)
a teacher in Philadelphia who in attempting to teach his charges
about science via a discussion of Earth’s disappearing
honey bees, ends up postulating what will eventually become
the film’s half-arsed mantra: "Science will come
up with some reason to put in the books but in the end it'll
just be a theory. We will fail to acknowledge that there are
forces at work beyond our understanding.”
It’s a profoundly depressing statement. Not only does
it reveal Shyamalan’s own failure to understand what
science does and what it is for, it also removes from him
any duty to put together a meaningful plot. If things just
happen and we can’t explain them, then anything can
happen – and in The Happening, anything does
happen – and it happens for no good reason. The result
is a film utterly without dramatic tension. We’re practically
told from the start that the lead characters are going to
survive and the director also tells us that he doesn’t
have to explain why, so what point is there in the audience
caring about what happens.
Were this a better film I’d be tempted to launch into
a tirade against the hopeless anti-rationalism at the heart
of this film – but to be honest, when a director and
cast have clearly given so little of themselves to the project,
it is difficult to summon up the energy to give this horrible
little film the critical kicking it richly deserves.
It is distressing to see a director of Shyamalan’s
obvious capabilities reduced to the production of shallow,
silly and witless pap like this. The Happening is
Shyamalan’s worst film by some distance, and is best
avoided.

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