The Unborn
Review
by Dustin Rowles
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The Unborn | 
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Of
the many, many things that annoy me about teen focused horror movies
that centre on a young, hot heroine - the one thing I loathe the most
is that fact that the young, hot heroine is almost always a whiny,
insufferable bitch who is the last person you want to save.
And there have been many - just take One Missed Call, Prom Night, The Haunting of Molly Hartley, The Eye and House of Wax as just a few examples.
The Unborn is the same...
She
whines and moans and Why Me's her way through the movie, while her
friends and family play hero, sacrificing themselves to protect her
from evil spirits and boogeyman.
And who dies? The friends and family.
And who lives? The whiny, insufferable bitch, of course.
What the hell happened to survival of the fittest?
If
the real world were a horror movie, it would be 75% Jessica Alba, while
the other 25% would be comprised of guys with bad facial hair and near
fatal shoulder wounds.
The Unborn is the latest and one of the more egregious examples of this trend - and this one comes from the enigmatic David S. Goyer.
I say enigmatic because I can't figure the level of this man's talent.
He is a terrible screenwriter (Blade II, Blade Trinity, Demonic Toys), except when he works with a more talented writer, like Christopher Nolan (Batman Begins, The Dark Knight) or Alex Proyas (Dark City).
My guess is that Goyer is an ideas man, and he is fairly awful with the details.
The Unborn
further demonstrates that : It is the first mainstream film that I know
of that mines the dybbuk myth, which might make for a fairly good plot
device if a better writer, director or cast had been involved.
Unfortunately, beyond the dybubuk idea, The Unborn
(to get the lame, horribly unclever pregnancy puns out of the way
upfront) is a first-rate miscarriage, a cinematic abortion that should
have never been conceived in the first place.
Did I leave out stillborn? Damnit!
Odette Yustman (Cloverfield)
stars as "Woman in Panties", a college student who lives at home and
spends a lot of time in front of the mirror and/or jogging.
Her
mother (Carla Gugino) mysteriously committed suicide while
institutionalised when "Woman in Panties" was just a "Little Girl in
Panties".
One night while "Woman in Panties" is babysitting a
creepy neighbour kid, the kid whacks her with a mirror (which does
something weird to her eye) which in turn leads to the discovery that
"Woman in Panties" was a twin - her twin brother died in utero.
This
is important only because the dybbuks are fond of twins for no real
reason other than the fact that that is how Goyer would like it.
So
this dybbuk (an evil spirit that refuses to leave the human world and
inhabits the body of a person because it can't get into the gates of
hell or heaven) starts tormenting her by appearing in "Woman in
Panties" dreams, in her mirror, and - naturally - in dance club
bathrooms.
As we all know - dybbuks love house music...
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Apparently, this dybbuk (who last inhabited
the body of "Woman in Panties" Great Uncle, who was killed by her
grandmother in Auschwitz) would really like to inhabit "Woman in Panties" body, probably because he is a "Hanes Her Way" kind of spirit.
And
instead of just jumping on in there, the dybbuk inhabits people around
her and then uses their bodies to scare the bejesus out of her.
It doesn't really make a whole hell of a lot of sense.
Goyer is just kind of hoping that, if you stare at "Woman in Panties" butt long enough, you won't sweat the details.
It
is a fairly convincing ass; unfortunately, it is terribly miscast. It
should probably stick to Victoria's Secret commercials and leave the
real asswork to Jessica Alba.
[ Spoiler Alert ]
Anyway,
"Woman in Panties" father is away on a business trip and apparently too
busy to come home and help her daughter deal with the evil spirit
trying to inhabit her body.
So eventually "Woman in Panties"
tracks down a Rabbi (Gary Oldman) and convinces him to drive away the
dybbuk by reading some Hebrew passages and blowing a shofar.
Which,
to be honest, is pretty goddamn entertaining if you can find joy in the
indignifying acts of great actors (seriously: What the f**k, Oldman?).
The
dybbuk then inhabits the body of Stringer Bell (Idris Elba) and
everyone yells a lot of Hebrew from printed off copies of the exorcism
manual at whatever body the dybbuk is inhabiting until it is eventually
driven back to hell in a very PG like manner. Yay!
[ End Spoilers ]
The Unborn
is about on par with every other teenage horror flick to come out over
the last few years, which is to say it is dull, dumb and plodding.
In other words, it is a great "make out" movie.
But, I will give Goyer this : He has a flair for visual effects.
Early on in The Unborn,
there are some fairly creepy sequences involving the Auschwitz kid, who
likes to curl himself up inside of medicine cabinets (those dybbuks! No
accounting for comfort).
Unfortunately, as the movie
progresses, Goyer throws so many of these creepy effects at you that
they lose their oomph, and after awhile, they are fairly laughable (in
fact, at the sold out screening I attended, the audience - or at
least those who remained past the half hour mark - alternated flinching
and guffawing at the imagery).
But, when Goyer wasn't throwing
dogs with upside down heads at you, he did have the good sense to point
that camera at "Woman in Panties" butt, which doesn't make for a very
good horror film - but underwear aficionados may get a kick out of it.
1 out
of 5
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The Unborn
Australian release: 26th February, 2009
Official
Site: The Unborn
Cast: Gary Oldman, Odette Yustman, Meagan Good
Director: David S Goyer
Brought To You By Pajiba
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