Current:Home > Stocks'Haunted Mansion' is a skip, but 'Talk to Me' is a real scare -WealthTrack
'Haunted Mansion' is a skip, but 'Talk to Me' is a real scare
View
Date:2025-04-15 16:42:26
After a family trip to Disneyland last year, my daughter told me that her favorite ride was the Haunted Mansion. It's long been a favorite of mine, too, an oasis of spooky-silly fun at the so-called Happiest Place on Earth. Given how popular the ride has been since it opened in 1969, it's perhaps unsurprising that it's inspired not one but two live-action Disney movies. Neither movie is particularly good, although the new one, directed by Justin Simien of Dear White People fame, is at least an improvement on the dreadful Eddie Murphy vehicle from 2003.
The always excellent LaKeith Stanfield stars as a moody physicist with an interest in the paranormal. He's one of a team of amateur ghostbusters investigating the weird goings-on at a manor house not far from New Orleans. Rosario Dawson plays a doctor who's recently moved into the house with her 9-year-old son. And there's Owen Wilson as a shifty priest, Danny DeVito as a cranky professor and Tiffany Haddish as a bumbling psychic.
Haunted Mansion has a busy, forgettable plot that exists mainly to set up all the macabre sight gags you might remember from the ride: the walking suit of armor, the self-playing pipe organ, the walls and paintings that mysteriously stretch like taffy.
None of this is even remotely scary, or meant to be scary, which is fine. It's more bothersome that none of it is especially funny, either. And while the house is an impressive piece of cobwebs-and-candlesticks production design, Simien hasn't figured out how to make it feel genuinely atmospheric.
The movie's saving grace is Stanfield's affecting performance as a guy whose interest in the supernatural turns out to be rooted in personal loss. I don't want to oversell this movie by suggesting that at heart it's a story of grief, but Stanfield is the one thing about it that's still haunting me days later.
If you're looking for a much, much scarier movie about how grief can open a portal between the living and the dead, the new Australian shocker Talk to Me is in select theaters this week. A critical favorite at this year's Sundance Film Festival, it stars the superb newcomer Sophie Wilde as Mia, an outgoing teenager who's recently lost her mom.
One night at a party with her friends, Mia gets sucked into a daredevil game involving a severed hand, embalmed and encased in ceramic. This hand apparently once belonged to a mystic. Anyone who grips it and says "Talk to me" can conjure the spirit of a dead person and invite it to possess their body — but only for 90 seconds, max. Any longer than that, and the spirit might want to stay.
The possession scenes are terrifically creepy, all dilated pupils and ghoulish makeup. But it's even creepier to see the effect of this game on Mia and her friends, as they start filming each other in their demonic state and posting the videos on social media. Talk to Me is the first feature directed by Danny and Michael Philippou, twin brothers who got their start making horror-comedy shorts for YouTube, and they've hit on a clever idea in turning this paranormal activity into a kind of recreational drug. But the high wears off very fast one night, when one of the spirits they're talking to claims to be Mia's mother — a development that leaves Mia reeling and turns this party game into a full-blown nightmare.
As a visceral piece of horror filmmaking, Talk to Me can be ruthlessly effective; even on a second viewing, there were scenes I could only watch through my fingers. The Philippou brothers have a polished sense of craft, though they're not always in control of their narrative, which sometimes falters as Mia herself begins to unravel. But Wilde's performance more than picks up the slack. She makes a great scream queen, but she also pinpoints the emotional desperation of someone held captive by grief. The movie takes something most of us can relate to — what it means to lose someone you love — and pushes it to its most twisted conclusion.
veryGood! (415)
Related
- The White House is cracking down on overdraft fees
- The economics of the influencer industry, and its pitfalls
- Finding Out These Celebrities Used to Date Will Set Off Fireworks in Your Brain
- What's the Commonwealth good for?
- Man can't find second winning lottery ticket, sues over $394 million jackpot, lawsuit says
- You Don’t Need to Buy a Vowel to Enjoy Vanna White's Style Evolution
- Robert De Niro Mourns Beloved Grandson Leandro De Niro Rodriguez's Death at 19
- Lead Poisonings of Children in Baltimore Are Down, but Lead Contamination Still Poses a Major Threat, a New Report Says
- What do we know about the mysterious drones reported flying over New Jersey?
- Adele Is Ready to Set Fire to the Trend of Concertgoers Throwing Objects Onstage
Ranking
- Global Warming Set the Stage for Los Angeles Fires
- Elon Musk picks NBC advertising executive as next Twitter CEO
- An Energy Transition Needs Lots of Power Lines. This 1970s Minnesota Farmers’ Uprising Tried to Block One. What Can it Teach Us?
- CNN's town hall with Donald Trump takes on added stakes after verdict in Carroll case
- Appeals court scraps Nasdaq boardroom diversity rules in latest DEI setback
- Congress could do more to fight inflation
- SpaceX wants this supersized rocket to fly. But will investors send it to the Moon?
- New Study Identifies Rapidly Emerging Threats to Oceans
Recommendation
Nearly 400 USAID contract employees laid off in wake of Trump's 'stop work' order
Inside Julia Roberts' Busy, Blissful Family World as a Mom of 3 Teenagers
25 Cooling Products for People Who Are Always Hot
Check Out the Most Surprising Celeb Transformations of the Week
Newly elected West Virginia lawmaker arrested and accused of making terroristic threats
Who's the boss in today's labor market?
Fossil Fuels Aren’t Just Harming the Planet. They’re Making Us Sick
Q&A: The Activist Investor Who Shook Up the Board at ExxonMobil, on How—or if—it Changed the Company