2 minute read
Knock At The Cabin: Shyamalan struggles to sell this home invasion slog
from Epigram issue 369
by Epigram
Back from hiatus and following the great success of his earlier works, M. Night Shyamalan is presenting us with his latest thriller, Knock At The Cabin. However, it seems to have missed the mark.
Perhaps one of the most curious careers in Hollywood is that of director M. Night Shyamalan, after ruling the Hollywood roost with classics like The Sixth Sense (1999) and Unbreakable (2000), he su ered a fall from grace, releasing critical disasters such as The Happening (2008) and The Last Airbender (2010). Undeterred, he has continued to release a new lm every few years, nally clawing back some critical praise with Split (2016). But can this latest e ort resist his pen- chant for writing ponderous and boring screenplays? Unlike him, I won’t withhold the twisted answer: no. ical presence, reveals he is a schoolteacher in an attempt to befriend the family and avoid scaring them. sacri ce even if this was the case.
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In this lm, Leonard (Dave Bautista) leads a group of people who invade the holiday cabin of a family of three. They tell the family they must choose one family member to sacri ce to prevent the apocalypse. Thus follows a drama contained solely within this cabin in the woods.
Leonard’s cohort is humanised early on; they are not there to harm the family and are reluctant to carry out violent acts. Leonard, despite his phys-
Former WWE wrestler Dave Bautista can seemingly do no wrong since his breakout role as Drax in Guardians of the Galaxy (2014), and this lm is no exception. He compellingly portrays the role of a gentle giant, forced to act against his good nature in service of the greater good. His physicality and unique appearance lend his character a special kind of strangeness which works in the lm’s favour from his rst introduction. Sadly, the lm squanders the initial intrigue.
Events trundle onwards with repetitive arguments between the characters about why this family was selected, whether the forewarned apocalypse is truly happening, and whether the family would be willing to make the
If you were hoping the lm would do something clever or interesting with any of these questions, it does not. A series of indulgent ashbacks only serve to drag out the screen time and fail to introduce any new secrets or twists.
Knock at the Cabin is further undermined by poor directing choices. There are some comically bad depictions of the apocalypse unfolding live on the news, which are executed with crummy special e ects and no attempt to alter the cinematography to look like believable news footage (instead they look like lm scenes played on a TV). The TV’s importance in the plot as the characters’ only evidence of an unfolding apocalypse makes the lm hard to take seriously at points.
Shyamalan worsens the situation by cameoing on a teleshopping programme before an apocalyptic news report, rather than being funny, it sacri ces dramatic tension for the sake of having the director appear in his own lm.
This example makes me question whether the man purposefully sabotages his lms as part of a scheme to become a living meme because if it were, it would make more sense than this.
Perhaps this story, which is based on a 2018 horror novel, The Cabin at the End of the World, is more compelling in book form than as a feature lm. Either way, it’s another Shyamalan project which misses the mark.
Image Credit: IMDB