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“Trap” Makes Concerts Roar-Worthy | movie review – Fremont Tribune

“Trap” Makes Concerts Roar-Worthy | movie review – Fremont Tribune

“Smile 2” delves into the behind-the-scenes life of a pop star, but “Trap” did that earlier in the year. The meaning of both: there is a murderer lurking in the audience.







Josh Hartnett

Hartnett


In the case of Trap, the danger is a serial killer in a sea of ​​pre-teen and teenage girls.

Screenwriter/director M. Night Shyamalan sends father and daughter to a Philadelphia arena to see her favorite performer, Taylor-type Lady Raven (Saleka Shyamalan), who has a never-ending concert with enough options for ticket holders to leave their seats.

There are so many pauses that you wonder if anyone is left in the arena. However, Dad (Josh Hartnett) is looking for a way out (aren’t they all dads?). He talks to the merchant, gets his ID, checks into the employee lounge, and discovers that he has a plan to catch the serial killer called “The Butcher.”

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Why a man named “The Butcher” would go to a concert (in the afternoon, no less) is anyone’s guess, but it means fewer men to look for on the way out.

Early on, we get the suspicion that Hartnett’s Cooper might be hiding something. He occasionally makes “V for Vendetta” faces and constantly makes excuses to leave his daughter Riley (Ariel Donoghue) alone.







ENTER-TRAP-MOVIE-REVIEW-ZOOM

Josh Hartnett, left, and Ariel Donohue star in Trap.


Warner Bros


Of course, there’s a reason Dad came up with an exit strategy.

Hayley Mills appears as an expert who knows how serial killers operate. She advises many people (mostly with her back to the camera), then becomes a player in the last third of the film.

Shyamalan has plenty of holes where this could fall. Riley, for example, gets a chance to take the stage as “The Dream Girl.” But if she wasn’t chosen, Dad’s next moves would have to be rethought.

Likewise, when he gets close to Lady Raven, Cooper becomes one of those vermin every singer should hate. He keeps asking for more and even gets a moment alone with her in her dressing room. We can tell you from experience that this WILL NEVER HAPPEN. No matter who wants a private conversation, there’s always an assistant nearby.

However, this sets up the escape route and leads “Trap” to the family’s home where a lot of things happen as part of “Scream”.

Hartnett doesn’t really fit into the Anthony Perkins mode, but he gets more lines here than in countless other films. He’s good at spinning, but he’s also good at giving the kid goosebumps. When it crosses the line, “Trap” becomes a typical horror film with a pretension “The Sixth Sense”.

That Shyamalan created this original “ah-ha” movie only adds to the disappointment of this one.

Maintains its tension for a good hour and then becomes like a concert with too much “new” music: Bring the hits, not the potential misses.

Of note: Saleka Shyamalan wrote the songs she’s singing and could get one on the charts if the producers push her hard enough. She gives us an idea of ​​what a Taylor singer should be and isn’t afraid to reach out and touch her, even if that touch is deadly.

Bruce Miller is editor of the Sioux City Journal.

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