The Strangers: Prey at
Night *** ½ / *****
Directed by: Johannes Roberts.
Written by: Ben Ketai based on the
screenplay by Bryan Bertino.
Starring: Christina Hendricks (Cindy),
Bailee Madison (Kinsey), Martin Henderson (Mike), Lewis Pullman (Luke), Emma
Bellomy (Dollface), Damian Maffei (Man in the Mask), Lea Enslin (Pin-Up Girl).
It
felt rather lonely in 2008 thinking that Bryan Bertino’s The Strangers was one
of the scariest films I had seen in years – most reviews dismissed it as
another cheap horror movie, but it was a film that creeped me out to no end. To
be fair, home invasion movies do that me more than most horror films do (I
rarely get all that scared by movies featuring ghosts for example) – and having
kids has only heightened that anxiety. Re-watching The Strangers in the lead up
to the long awaited sequel, I was even more impressed by it now than I was then
(and seeing how I hadn’t watched it in 10 years, the scares worked again). I’m
glad that the film has become a new horror classic in that time. The Strangers:
Prey at Night is now here – why it took 10 years to make it, I’ll never know
(especially since it as announced right after the original was released), and
while it isn’t quite as good as the original, it’s pretty damn close. For
horror sequels, it’s tough to do better.
The
original film was about a couple, who were already frayed when the film opened –
thanks to a proposal gone awry – but for the sequel, the filmmakers have
decided to expand that to a family, but has kept the fraying part. After a
brief prologue that re-establishes the trio of masked killers – the film sketches
this film in strokes that seem broad, but still get to the heart of who they
are. Cindy and Mike (Christina Hendricks and Martin Henderson) are concerned
about their teenage daughter Kinsey (Bailee Madison) – and have decided to ship
her off to boarding school (her exact “crimes” are not spoken, but she wears a
Ramones t-shirt, and smokes cigarettes). Kinsey is angry at her parents for
sending her away, and resentful of her older brother Luke (Lewis Pullman), who
she thinks her parents see as the golden child. The family is headed to a
trailer park run by an older, drunk uncle for the night before dropping Kinsey off
at boarding school. It’s off season, so no one else is going to be around. If
you’ve seen the original film you know what will happen next – a knock on the
door late at night, a young woman, faced obscured by darkness and long blonde
hair asking for “Tamara”, and then escalating terror as that woman is joined by
two others, another woman and a man – all wearing fake cheery masks, as they
torment the family.
The
Strangers: Prey at Night is smart enough to know that it cannot repeat
everything from the first film. The original eventually does build to a bloody,
bleak climax, but it takes almost its entire runtime to get there, so that for
most of the runtime you don’t really know what the masked stranger’s intentions
are – they could just be really committed to pulling off a perverse prank. You
cannot get away with that twice, so this film doesn’t hide what those
intentions are, and while the result is a fairly standard structure of the
family members getting picked off one at a time, it also means that once the
terror starts, it never really lets up.
Bertino
is back as a screenwriter, but not as a director – that falling to Johannes
Roberts this time, but improves greatly from last year’s surprise hit 47 Meters
Down, starring Mandy Moore and Claire Holt as a pair of sisters, trapped
underwater, with diminishing oxygen, as sharks circle above them (that film was
effective, but not this effective). Roberts in many ways takes his cues from
what Bertino did in the original film (at least when he’s not cribbing from
John Carpenter – especially Christine) – there are a lot of shots of the
potential horror in the background – we can see them, the characters cannot.
Roberts makes great use of the confined spaces inside the trailers – but perhaps
even better use of the dark fields around them – providing just enough light to
see what’s happening. Sure, he may too heavily
on the ironic use of 1980s pop songs against the killings – but that’s a cliché
he fully embraces, and works wonderfully.
The
result is another horror film that has haunted me for days since seeing it – a truly
scary film that may not be original, and may not have quite the impact of the
first film, which was one of a number at that time turning horror clichés on its
head – but is ruthlessly effective at what it’s doing.
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