Malignant

NEW YORK (CNS) — Considered artistically, director James Wan’s “Malignant” (Warner Bros.) initially registers as a dreary horror tale but later perks up to become creatively creepy. As it does so, however, any sense of restraint with regard to the gore factor involved in its proceedings is abandoned and the bloodletting goes off the charts in a climactic rampage of slicing, dicing and dismemberment.

Part of the prevailing gloom at the start has to do with the plight of our troubled protagonist, Madison “Maddie” Mitchell (Annabelle Wallis). Haunted by a series of miscarriages her physically abusive husband Derek (Jake Abel) blames on her, pregnant Maddie’s lot goes from bad to worse when a mysterious intruder murders Derek and attacks her, causing her to lose her latest baby.

But Maddie’s situation then becomes downright bizarre as she inexplicably begins to witness other slayings by the same killer. By means she can’t figure out, she is somehow transported, in a paralyzed trance state, to the scene of each crime.

Maddie tries to help the two police officers on the case, Detectives Kekoa Shaw (George Young) and Regina Moss (Michole Briana White), with their investigation. Yet, while Shaw proves sympathetic, Moss remains resolutely skeptical about Maddie’s claims, even treating her account with sarcastic derision.

While it eventually succeeds in unsettling viewers, as scripted by Akela Cooper, “Malignant” falls flat when it tries to establish any emotional context, as with the relationship between Maddie and her understandably concerned sister, Sydney Lake (Maddie Hasson). In fact, some of the would-be serious dialogue is risible.

The unintended laughs, however, give way to queasiness as the body toll, exacted in ever more hideous ways, steadily mounts.

The film contains excessive gruesome violence, about a half-dozen instances each of profanity and milder swearing and much rough and crude language. The Catholic News Service classification is O — morally offensive. The Motion Picture Association rating is R — restricted. Under 17 requires accompanying parent or adult guardian.       

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Mulderig is on the staff of Catholic News Service.

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CAPSULE REVIEW

“Malignant” (Warner Bros.)

There’s a dreary feel to the early scenes of this horror tale from director James Wan and, though it later perks up to become creatively creepy, the initially somewhat restrained gore factor goes off the charts in a climactic rampage of slicing, dicing and dismemberment. After a mysterious intruder murders her abusive husband (Jake Abel) and attacks her, causing the latest in a series of miscarriages she has suffered, a troubled woman (Annabelle Wallis) inexplicably begins to witness other slayings by the same killer, being somehow transported, by means she can’t figure out, in a paralyzed trance state to the scene of each crime. Of the two detectives on the case, whose investigation she tries to help, one (George Young) is sympathetic, the other (Michole Briana White) skeptical. While it succeeds in unsettling viewers, the film falls flat when it tries to establish any emotional context, as with the relationship between the protagonist and her understandably concerned sister (Maddie Hasson). And some of the would-be serious dialogue in Akela Cooper’s script is risible. But the unintended laughs give way to queasiness as the body toll, exacted in ever more hideous ways, steadily mounts. Excessive gruesome violence, about a half-dozen instances each of profanity and milder swearing, much rough and crude language. The Catholic News Service classification is O — morally offensive. The Motion Picture Association rating is R — restricted. Under 17 requires accompanying parent or adult guardian.   

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CLASSIFICATION

“Malignant” (Warner Bros.) — Catholic News Service classification, O — morally offensive. Motion Picture Association rating, R — restricted. Under 17 requires accompanying parent or adult guardian.

Original Article