Signs
Movie Review:
Faith
is a precarious thing. It is something that is different
things to different people, and is manifested by people
in many ways. There are those that base their lives upon
faith and those who have little left. One such person is
Graham Hess (Mel Gibson), a former preacher, and widowed
father of two who is about to face his greatest test in
the new M.Night Shyamalan thriller "Signs".
Hess
is struggling to make sense of the tragic and needless death
of his wife six months past, and has left the ministry behind
as the loss of his wife has eroded all the faith he had,
and left him a sad and bitter man. His son Morgan (Rory
Culkin), and daughter Bo (Abigail Breslin), are his sole
reason for being and with the help of his brother Merrill
(Joaquin Phoenix), Hess is able to provide a comfortable
if lonely lifestyle in a rural area near Philadelphia.
That
is until Hess and his family discover a series of bizarre
patterns in their cornfield and notice odd behavior from
the family pets. At first Hess liens this to an illness
in the animals and some local playing pranks on him for
leaving the priesthood, but soon odd sounds and visitors
that they can hear but move to fast to be seen start to
interrupt their lives. Local Officer Paski (Cherry Jones)
attributes the disturbance to a couple of strangers in town
whom have not been seen recently and advises the family
to take some time off in town. Before leaving to the town,
the Hess family learns via the television that odd crop
formations have been appearing all over India and are spreading
all over the world at an alarming rate. Young Morgan's claims
of it being a forecast of an alien invasion are scoffed
at until an even stranger series of events happens and strange
lights begin to appear in the skies over major cities.
Before
long, Graham is faced with having to deal with the series
revelation that he and his family may be in grave danger
and the very survival of the human race may be at stake.
It is
at this point that the film makes a bold and very rewarding
move. Instead of becoming a big FX based us versus the monster
ala "ID 4", Shyamalan pulls the film in even closer
and makes it an intense character driven story that is pulled
off very well by the cast. The tension mounts and the fact
that what is menacing the family is not shown clearly only
adds to the tension, we know something is there, but like
the Hess family, we never see or learn more than they do
and this greatly adds to the tension of the film. This could
have become a disaster in the hands of a weaker director
but Shyamalan proves that he is one of the most gifted talents
in film as he wrote, directed, produced, and stared in a
small but vital supporting role in the film. Gibson is solid
in his role as he portrays Hess as a broken man who has
given up on everything in the world but his children and
struggles to grasp the situation that he finds himself in,
as many of us would indeed do so. Gibson plays Hess with
a vulnerability and flawed persona that shows him as a regular
guy rather than the larger than life characters we have
become accustomed to seeing and as he did in "We Were
Soldiers", Gibson shows once again that he is truly
a versatile and gifted actor who is confident to let his
character and acting rather than his looks, humor and FX
carry the film.
There
was some good humor in the film and Phoenix does well blending
the humor of his role with seriousness when it is required,
it was easy to believe and care for this family, as they
were not a stock Hollywood film family. Shyamalan cleverly
avoids falling into some of the standard traps of films
of this type as the audience like the characters are constantly
kept in the dark. The tension mounts as the film goes on,
and the nerves of more than a few people in the audience
were becoming frazzled. To me, "Signs" evoked
memories of classic episodes of the "Twilight Zone"
where the human drama and imagined fear carried the story
rather than an array of FX. It was very refreshing to see,
and is one of the more pleasant surprises of the summer.
As he did with "The Sixth Sense" Shyamalan has
tapped into our subconscious fears and unleashed a gripping
and cerebral thriller that does not tidy everything up in
a nice simple package and will scare some and make you think.
5 stars
out of 5
Gareth
Von Kallenbach
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