Sunday Territorian

The flicks

If at first you don’t survive, die, and try again in HAPPY DEATH DAY, or get caught in a blandside climbing gp up THE MOUNTAIN BETWEEN US

- LEIGH PAATSCH

HAPPY DEATH DAY (M) Director: Christophe­r Landon (Paranormal Activity: The Marked Ones) Starring: Jessica Rothe, Israel Broussard, Ruby Modine, Rachel Matthews. Rating:

AN appealingl­y appalling teen-horror thriller, Happy Death Day chucks Groundhog Day into a microwave with the first Scream movie, and turns all the controls way up to the max.

Cleverly, the filmmakers know we’ll all keep watching to see what happens, even if it is against our better judgment.

Surprising­ly, Happy Death Day never quite self-combusts, or even melts down into a glob of gory goo (though it does emit some whiffy fumes at times).

No, this is actually a tight, well-packaged effort: capable of raising tension levels into the dread zone when needs be, and just as capable of cracking a gag or three about how ridiculous the whole exercise is becoming.

Little-known Jessica Rothe stars as Tree, a self-obsessed college student trapped in a terminal time loop, for reasons which will never be sufficient­ly explained.

Not that it matters one iota. Happy Death Day is not here to re-prove Einstein’s Theory of Relativity. It is here to pick you up and take you on a pulpy, gulpy thrill ride.

A typical day for Tree runs something like this. Each morning at 9am, she wakes up in someone else’s room across campus.

She gets dressed. Does the traditiona­l walk of shame back to her sorority house, where her roommate will remind her that today is her birthday.

Then it’s off to a day of classes, interspers­ed with a steamy hook-up with a married professor, a fractious meeting with her sorority sisters, and preparatio­ns for a party later in the evening.

By midnight, Tree will have died a terrible death at the hands of a masked killer. Then her alarm goes off, and the whole surreal ordeal starts over. To stop finishing the day on such a bum note, this determined young woman must sift for clues about her assassin’s identity every time she is about to die.

Poor old Tree gets lopped over 20 times during the movie, so the investigat­ion could take a while.

Though this movie is as disposable and dumb as such fare can be, it delivers its unrefined batch of goods in full, thanks to two key factors.

Firstly, the Groundhog Day repetition thing never gets old. Done right, like it is here, it forces the plotting to drop a lot of excess baggage.

Secondly, the casting of Rothe in the lead role of Tree is a masterstro­ke. For someone whose acting CV is mostly C-list TV, she is a real find. Someone who can repeatedly switch between confident, annoying, amusing and vulnerable — so quickly and so precisely — has real skills.

At its best, Happy Death Day is big, trashy fun, best seen with small expectatio­ns. At its worst, it’s just trash ... but it’s still fun!

 ??  ?? Jessica Rothe screams herself silly in the film Happy Death Day, and below, Rothe and actor Israel Broussard
Jessica Rothe screams herself silly in the film Happy Death Day, and below, Rothe and actor Israel Broussard
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