Times Colonist

Not-scary Slender Man misses the mark

- KATIE WALSH

Slender Man Where: Capitol 6, SilverCity Starring: Joey King, Julia Goldani-Telles, Jaz Sinclair Directed by: Sylvain White Parental advisory: 14A Rating: 1 1/2 stars out of four

What darkness lies in the dreamy imaginativ­e mind of young girls? The mystery has been a source of inspiratio­n for horror classics from The Bad Seed to The Exorcist, and it could have been a fascinatin­g theme to explore in the internet-inspired Slender Man, written by David Birke and directed by Sylvain White.

Unfortunat­ely, this profoundly not-scary horror film misses the mark about what makes its subject matter interestin­g.

If you’ve heard of the internet phenomenon that is Slender Man, it’s likely from a 2014 attempted murder in Waukesha, Wisconsin, in which two 12-year-old girls stabbed a friend 19 times and left her for dead. They told police they were acting as proxies for Slender Man, a character they discovered on a website hosting “creepypast­a” ghost stories copied and pasted from the internet.

The true crime story was covered in the excellent documentar­y Beware the Slenderman, but the horror adaptation takes a different tack, taking the character literally, as a malevolent force that can be summoned with a ritual that is The Ring by way of a slumber party game.

A group of small-town, lightly goth teenage girls stumble upon Slender Man during a sleepover — Hallie (Julia Goldani Telles) jokingly tells her mother: “We’re going to drink vodka and meet guys on the internet,” in the film’s only winking line of dialogue, and that they do. Soon, the friend group is disappeari­ng, and the girls are beset with heinous visions of Slender Man, a tall, faceless man in a black bespoke suit. What does he want? Them. What’s he going to do once he gets them? We’re not exactly sure.

That’s the problem with a Slender Man horror movie — there are no rules, because there is no mythology. The character was invented in a 2009 Photoshop contest by Eric Knudsen, a.k.a. Victor Surge, and crowdsourc­ed stories and viral videos hunting for Slender Man have made up the lore.

In Slender Man, we don’t know anything about him, or what to fear, and the film doesn’t fill that in. All we know is he likes lurking in the woods and strangling young girls with his long, treelike fingers — and yet somehow he also has the ability to FaceTime menacingly.

Birke’s script is plainly straightfo­rward, a simple supernatur­al chase story. It doesn’t plumb the depths of what might make Slender Man scary, so Slender Man isn’t scary at all. There’s no tension and no suspense, because even when the girls are panicked and screaming as Slender Man attacks them in their imaginatio­ns, we’re constantly yanked back to a fairly normal reality.

What’s truly terrifying (and what Beware the Slenderman deftly illustrate­s) is the vulnerabil­ity of young susceptibl­e minds exposed to all manner of folklore and fake news online, how suggestion can inspire outlandish fantasies and even violent action. Slender Man brushes up against that theme with the increasing­ly hysterical Wren (Joey King), but falls back again and again on the ghost story, staying firmly in the realm of paranormal horror, where unfortunat­ely, the scares are increasing­ly svelte.

Slender Man has a moody, atmospheri­c, often abstract, esthetic. Shot by Luca Del Puppo, with a starkly desaturate­d palate of browns and greys, it’s sometimes so dark that it’s hard to see.

Is Slender Man real, or the figment of an overactive, internet obsessed morbid imaginatio­n? The film tries to have it both ways, and ends up with nothing at all.

 ?? DANA STARBARD ?? Joey King, left, and Julia Goldani-Telles in Slender Man.
DANA STARBARD Joey King, left, and Julia Goldani-Telles in Slender Man.

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