The New Horror Film Smile Can’t Live Up to Its Amazing Premise – Gizmodo

The smile is the star in Smile.Image: Paramount

Theres no real formula for a great horror movie. A great horror movie can be poignant and slow. It can be fast and exciting. It can be gross, it can be understated. Really as long as a horror film is scary, interesting, or engaging, anything goes. Smile, the directorial debut of Parker Finn, wants to be many of these things, but in an attempt to check those boxes, it fails at the most important one: being enjoyable to watch.

Smile stars Sosie Bacon (13 Reasons Why, Mare of Easttown) as Rose, an overworked hospital psychologist who tries to help a patient thats legitimately disturbed. This woman, an otherwise sane Ph.D. candidate, pleads with Rose to trust that shes truly seeing something she believes will kill her. Rose obviously doesnt believe herand, as a result, she ends up seeing the same things the Ph.D. candidate saw: visions of an entity that looks just like the people in your life, but with big, terrifying grins on their faces.

Rose tries to tell her husband Trevor (Jessie T. Usher) about it, but he doesnt believe her. She tries to tell her sister Holly (Gillian Zinser) about it, but she doesnt believe her. She tries to tell you get the idea. No one believes the story Rose is telling, just like she didnt believe the woman who may have passed the curse on to her. As things get worse and worse, Rose tries to figure out where this presence came from and ends up uncovering more than she ever couldve imagined.

Star Sosie Bacon is the daughter of Kevin Bacon and Kyra Sedgwick.Image: Paramount

The problem with Smile isnt the idea of it. The idea of this evil entity that just creepily smiles at you is exactly that: creepy. Its ripe with possibility. But Smile never lives up to it. Yes, there are a handful of intense smile scenes. A couple of good jump scares. Some legit gore here and there. But thats few and far between when compared to the main story of Rose trying to solve the overarching mystery and being gaslit. She cant find anyone who believes her and that isolation ends up weighing even more on her, and the audience watching, than the evil itself. It gets to be so bad youre begging for the smile demon to pop out and do something just so Rose will just stop having doors slammed in her face. Even the people who do try and help her, like an ex-boyfriend/cop (Kyle Gallner) or her own psychiatrist (Robin Weigert), dont actually understand or buy into Roses story. Which only makes things worse.

G/O Media may get a commission

Alexa?Has an 8" HD touchscreen which can let you watch shows, stream things, or even make video calls thanks to the 13 MP camera, you can also use it to control other smart devices in your home with ease, and even display photos if you want to as a digital photo frame.

Within this idea Finn, who also wrote the script, obviously wants to explore trauma and its long-lasting impacts. Which is valid. But Roses core trauma, and inability to get anyone to believe her removes any of the fun the occasional smile scene brings. As a result, the film almost becomes punishing in its insistence that Rose is in an unescapable, no-win situation. Therefore, the true horror doesnt come from the evil presence, it comes more from the humans who dont believe in it. That may sound like a cool, unique take on the genre but some of Finns flashier stylistic choices, such as multiple upside drone shots and occasional out-of-place gore, dont mesh with it. As a result, Roses isolation being the real villain is more like a haphazard consequence rather than the true intention.

Smile does its best to be a cool, hip, fun horror movie, while also saying something meaningful and important. But in trying to achieve too many things, it fails at them all. It either needed to be much more energetic or have deeper thematic resonance. But it accomplishes neither. And that did not leave a smile on our face.

Smile just had its world premiere at Fantastic Fest 2022. It opens wide September 30.

Want more io9 news? Check out when to expect the latest Marvel and Star Wars releases, whats next for the DC Universe on film and TV, and everything you need to know about House of the Dragon and Lord of the Rings: The Rings of Power.

Read more here:
The New Horror Film Smile Can't Live Up to Its Amazing Premise - Gizmodo

Related Post

Reviewed and Recommended by Erik Baquero
This entry was posted in Scary Movie. Bookmark the permalink.

Comments are closed.