The trick to creating a great horror movie is to find
somewhere people feel safe, a place they generally don’t equate with fear, and
exploit the hell out of it. Thing what Jaws did for the water, or Freddy
Krueger for dreams. What takes balls, if you’ll excuse the expression, is to
take THE classic fear and build a movie around it. Light’s Out looks to take everyone’s primal fear of the dark, put a
name to it and bring that childhood fear right back to the forefront. Teresa
Palmer (a favorite of mine since I am
Number Four) stars as Rebecca, a young woman who is brought back home to
help with her little brother, Martin, after her mentally unwell mother’s (Maria
Bello) actions warrant the attention of child protective services. Rebecca
comes back during a tough time for a family that has lived their entirety in
the tough times margin, the recent loss in the family just compounds what they’ve
all been dealing with for years. Thanks to their mother, Sophie and her friend ‘Diana’.
Diana, you see, is the one that comes in the dark.
There’s something great about a film that knows it’s place.
I don’t mean that in the chauvinist type of judgmental way it’s usually used, I
mean the movie business has a need for well-thought quick scare horror movies
that don’t over stay their welcome…they’re like Chipotle or Noodles and Co., no
you wouldn’t go there for an anniversary dinner but it’s miles ahead of
McDonalds. Taking the number one fear of any person to ever live, the dark, and
turning it into an atmospheric and suspense-laden 81 minutes is done in a way
of beauty by David Sandberg who clearly knows that just because a film isn’t
destined to be a classic doesn’t mean it can’t be thoroughly satisfying. As we
learn more about “Diana” aka the Boogeyman/woman we see that Sandberg put some
real thought into a mythos for the film, though I honestly don’t think it was
wholly necessary and may have even been more effective without it. That being
said having the backstory does round out what the film has to say about mental
illness and Rebecca’s fears that she may be near her mother’s footsteps.
3.5 Out of 5 Guttenbergs