Chronicle Movie Review

Pretty much the senior year in High School I always dreamed of.

How does this sound familiar?  A introverted high school geek is abused by his alcoholic father and all of his so-called peers.  Ignored by girls, pushed around by bullies, and spending each day in an alienating Skinner box of loneliness.  Then, through some set of mysterious (and blatantly unexplained) phenomenon he gains super powers and uses them to wreck most of his town and punish all who had ever wronged him.  To be honest, I really didn’t have to see Chronicle as I wrote the script for it pretty much every day in my head throughout high school and for a bunch of years after that.

First off, this movie is pretty freaking amazing.  Found footage is a little overplayed these days, but in this case it is used to present some pretty amazing concepts and really good characters, each with their own personality and priorities.  Plus it is about kids with super powers.  Additionally I was really impressed with the acting and performances of the three kids, and the found footage aspect of the movie felt incredibly organic and real.

It’s usually at this point in one of my reviews where I say something like “That’s not to say the movie doesn’t have it’s faults, which we will go into detail shortly”.  However, as I sit here reflecting on my cinema experience I honestly can’t think of anything that bugged me about this film.  I’ll try to think about something before I get to the black holes, but overall I think this was an excellent movie.

The story is of Andrew (Dane DeHaan-In Treatment, True Blood, the Front), an introverted geek treated with abuse and contempt and disregard by pretty much everyone around him except for his cousin Matt (Alex Russell-Almost Kings, the Best Man, Wasted on the Young).  He buys an old camera to document his life but it is also implied he is using it as a defense against his abusive father (Micheal Kelly-Adjustment Bureau, Dawn of the Dead, Unbreakable)  and the people around him, as well as film the last days of his dying mother (Bo Peterson-the Wooden Camera, Endgame, the Bone Snatcher).  Matt drags him to a rave in a barn somewhere.  After a few minutes of him looking and acting painfully out of place (lots of deja vu there for me as well) he gets dragged out of the parking lot by the most popular kid in school, Steve (Micheal B. Jordan-Friday Night Lights, House M.D., Red Tails) who wants him to use his camera to film something weird in a field.  It is a tunnel leading down.  Matt, Steve, and Andrew all descend, where they see a big glowing thing that gives them all telekinetic ability.

At this point the film turns into a documentary of the three boys as they develop and strengthen their abilities, as well as their friendships.  They run around doing what teenage boys would given God-like powers: play pranks on people and laughing their asses off.  As things develop they gain more and more powers, including flight and invulnerability.  Meanwhile, Andrews friendship with Steve helps him gain popularity, at least until he gets drunk at a party and embarrasses himself in front of a girl, who blabs it all over the school proving once again that women are evil (oops did I type that part out loud?).

Anyway, things take place that many people may interpret as a dark turn but which I saw the inevitable conclusion of an abused geek gaining powers, showing once again that geeks are to be feared and respected, not abused.  Paybacks are a bitch, and he starts dealing it wholesale.  He also is motivated to find money to help his sick mother.  I don’t want to get too much into the rest of the story.  Nothing will really surprise you too much, but I found it enjoyable nevertheless.

The stars.  Really well done found footage movie.  Two stars.  The character development was really strong for all three guys, and the interaction between the three felt very real and believable.  Two stars.  Good acting from the three main guys.  One star.  While the film was found footage, the directors managed to find really clever ways of making it not suffer from the usual gremlins of found footage films: Captain Shaky-motion-sickness-inducement and his sidekick Corp. There’s-always-one-main-character-missing-from-the-scene.  I thought the use and placement of the cameras really clever and well done.  One star.  For being low budget the special effects were pretty cool.  One star.  Dialog was good and real also.  One star.  Overall a lot of fun.  Two stars.  Total: ten stars.

The black holes.  I think I did come up with a couple, but the really cool thing about the way this film was filmed was there doesn’t really feel like you need any of the missing information explained to you.  For that matter, the missing information and unexplored sub plots actually adds to the story in this format.  I will say that while the movie was good I think it would have been better if they had gone for the R rating.  The PG-13 choices they were forced to make left a lot of the scenes feeling  a little flat.  One black hole.  I will also say I was hoping Andrew would do more to his miserable class mates.  That is really just me, but there it is.  One black hole.  Total: two black holes.

So a grand total of eight stars, and the best movie I have seen so far this year.  I thought this was really good, and odds are you will enjoy the heck out of it.  It is more of a superhero film than anything else (and about 1,000 times more entertaining than big budget bomb Green LanternGL image courtesy of the Comic Book T-Shirt category) so treat it as such when trying to decide to bring a date to this.  If she is looking forward to seeing The Avengers then she might enjoy this.  If not she will be bored and in that case see it with your other nerd friends.

Thanks everyone for reading.  These blogs are getting to be more and more fun to do, and I am now using my daily stats as a measure of my worth as a human being.  Follow me on Twitter @NerdKungFu.  Thanks again, and talk to you soon.

Dave

 


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