Saskatoon StarPhoenix

Third act weakens Escape Room

Cheesy opening and a blown third act weaken horror film that had potential

- LINDSEY BAHR

In retrospect, it’s actually kind of surprising that there hasn’t been an escape room-themed horror movie until now. The popular interactiv­e mystery games are kind of mini films.

There’s a built-in set, stakes, opportunit­ies for conflict and teamwork and a logical start and finish.

It’s certainly a more obvious fit for a movie than a board game or theme park ride.

So, from the imaginatio­ns of Fast & Furious producer Neal H. Moritz and Insidious: The Last Key director Adam Robitel comes Escape Room, where the characters are as random as an audience-chosen improv group (Investment banker! Soldier! Miner! Smart teen! Grocer!), the rooms look like discarded Nine Inch Nails music video sets (not exactly a criticism), the stakes are $10,000 or death, which seem far too low and too high, and everyone agrees that Petula Clark’s Downtown is a bad song (which is both incorrect and a strange, rude hill to die on).

As if the film is concerned that the audience will lose interest immediatel­y, Escape Room starts at the end, as a lone man, Ben (Logan Miller), desperatel­y tries to figure out the clues in a room that is quickly closing in on itself, Star Wars trash-compactor-style. It’s certainly a jolt of energy up front, but right as things are

looking really bleak for Ben, it cuts to “three days earlier.” It’s cheap and a little insulting to have to reassure the audience that there is some exciting and harrowing stuff to come as long as they get through all the boring introducto­ry stuff. At least it doesn’t resort to the old recordscra­tch, freeze-frame, “you’re probably wondering how I got here” standby.

The thing is, Escape Room isn’t actually all that bad — just kind of silly, but it takes a moment to readjust your expectatio­ns after that condescend­ing beginning, and a very phoned-in introducti­on to the unlucky six Chicago strangers who all receive a mysterious box and decide, what the heck, let’s check out this escape room. There’s the skittish but brilliant college student Zoey (Taylor Russell), the ruthless finance guy Jason (Jay Ellis), the veteran who hates heat Amanda (Deborah Ann Woll), the regular joe Mike (Tyler Labine) and the escape room obsessive who honestly never does all that much to help Danny (Nik Dodani).

Curiously, no one seems all that concerned about the odd premise that this team activity could have a single winner at all, or perhaps they think they’ll all win $10,000. I guess it becomes clearer when people start dying in the rooms.

And, boy, are they put through the wringer. They have to brave extreme heat, extreme cold, poison, drugs, rising tensions and body counts while trying to figure out how to get out of each puzzle room, a few of which are pretty interestin­g. It’s like a Final Destinatio­n spinoff where each character’s past trauma haunts them. Mercifully, all the carnage is kept to tolerable levels.

The filmmakers haven’t gone so far as to put you in the game, too. A lot of it is watching all the characters find keys and have their own revelation­s, so by the time you get 0to the fifth room, it’s understand­able if interest is starting to wane a bit, even with the addition of a link between the six people.

The third act kind of blows it though, and the movie essentiall­y ends with a shrug and the possibilit­y for a sequel. You could do worse in January. And anyone already interested in the idea of an escape room that tries to kill you probably isn’t expecting all that much out of this anyway.

 ?? SONY PICTURES ?? Jay Ellis takes on the role of Jason, the standard “ruthless financial guy” character, in Adam Robitel’s new movie Escape Room.
SONY PICTURES Jay Ellis takes on the role of Jason, the standard “ruthless financial guy” character, in Adam Robitel’s new movie Escape Room.

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