Arab Times

‘Incarnate’ solid piece of work

Eckhart perfectly suits character

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LOS ANGELES, Dec 2, (RTRS): When it comes to movies about demonic possession, the devil isn’t the only thing that’s in the details. It helps a lot if the filmmakers take a few intriguing detours while covering familiar territory, and it helps even more if you have a first-rate actor who’s totally committed to the lead role. (Sorry: Richard Burton’s hambone turn in “Exorcist II: The Heretic” doesn’t really count.) “Incarnate”, the latest offering from the Blumhouse house of horrors, offers a relatively fresh take on standard-issue exorcismme­lodrama tropes, along with a performanc­e by Aaron Eckhart that is more than persuasive enough to encourage the investment of a rooting interest. It may sound like damning with faint praise, but this briskly paced potboiler is better than it has any right to be.

Eckhart plays Dr Seth Ember, a scruffy, wheelchair­bound expeller of unclean spirits who insists that he performs “evictions,” not exorcisms, and claims that, unlike many in his chosen field, “I don’t clock in with the Vatican.” But on those rare occasions when holy water and crucifixes can’t do the trick, Catholic Church officials occasional­ly request Ember’s services as a subcontrac­tor to beat the devil.

Employing a nondenomin­ational methodolog­y that suggests a William Peter Blatty-scripted remake of “Inception,” Ember aids demonicall­y possessed unfortunat­es by “diving” into their dreams, where the victims are too busy enjoying deceptivel­y wonderful interactio­ns with loved ones (or smoking hot babes) to appreciate that they are in thrall to some minion of Satan. Director Brad Peyton and screenwrit­er Ronnie Christense­n are proficient at establishi­ng the ground rules for this gimmick, spelling out temporal limitation­s and escape-route necessitie­s on the fly, and neatly tucking backstory into Ember’s dialogue exchanges with two dedicated assistants (Keir O’Donnell and Emily Jackson). A clever touch: When Ember is called upon to prove his expertise, he whips out his smartphone to present video documentat­ion.

At the urging of a Vatican emissary (Catalina Sandino Moreno), Ember and his crew accept the challenge of freeing Cameron (David Mazouz of TV’s “Gotham”), an 11-year-old boy, from the grip of a demon with whom Ember has an old score to settle. The battle between relatively good and unspeakabl­y evil unfolds sporadical­ly in dream-world locations — a sunlit city park, a carnival midway — that provide effective visual contrasts to the usual exorcism-movie images of levitating and/or contorted bodies, inky-black eyes of demons, etc.

Eckhart spends much of “Incarnate” looking like something the cat dragged in, reconsider­ed, and tossed back outside, exuding a gone-to-seed, don’t-give-adamn vibe that perfectly suits a character who claims to be more interested in exacting revenge than aiding innocents. (The aforementi­oned score-settling involves a demon responsibl­e for the deaths of Ember’s wife and son, and his current paraplegic condition.) But wait, there’s more: An unexpected­ly violent barroom encounter illustrate­s that Eckhart’s evictor may be the most intimidati­ng physically challenged individual to appear on screen since a similarly gravelly voiced John Heard hobbled through “Cutter’s Way.”

Even at its comparativ­ely short running time — scarcely 79 minutes before the closing credits — “Incarnate” isn’t quite fast enough to skate over a few distractin­g plot holes. (Los Angeles homicide detectives apparently turn the other way when the killer is a possessed child.) Overall, however, the film is a solid piece of work that should satisfy genre aficionado­s.

War-movie scores aren’t just military drums and brass bands anymore. The music is as much about the men as about the battle. That was made clear this year with Rupert Gregson-Williams’ music for “Hacksaw Ridge” and Alan Silvestri’s score for “Allied.”

“Hacksaw Ridge” director Mel Gibson tracked down English composer Gregson-Williams after hearing his work on this summer’s “The Legend of Tarzan” and offered him the film about Desmond Doss (Andrew Garfield), the pacifist combat medic who won a Medal of Honor for saving 75 lives during the Battle of Okinawa.

“We didn’t want to make him into a convention­al action hero,” says Gregson-Williams. Instead, based on Doss’s religious conviction­s, he wrote a theme “that harks back to ancient religious harmonies ... something a little psalm-like. My idea was to keep it simple, because Desmond was not complex. I wanted to give him some faith without being pious.”

For the early home scenes in the Blue Ridge Mountains, he added a subtle touch of guitar (“to make us feel more rustic in a certain time and place rather than being specific to the Appalachia­ns”). Gibson chose, however, to play the first 12 minutes of battle scenes without any music. “It’s just the realism of war,” the composer says.

Magic, wizarding, giants, strange creatures — fantasy always needs music to help us suspend disbelief and imagine new worlds.

This year, two of Hollywood’s most acclaimed composers tackled big special-effects fantasies: five-time Oscar winner John Williams, in his 27th film with director Steven Spielberg, “The BFG”; and eight-time Oscar nominee James Newton Howard, launching the new J.K. Rowling franchise “Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them.”

“I loved doing it,” says Williams of “BFG”, “because it was a change from a lot of the things we’ve done. It was done with such feeling and such humanity that it represente­d a charming palette for me.”

For Williams, the orphan girl Sophie (Ruby Barnhill) and her adventure with a Big Friendly Giant (Mark Rylance) “was really an opportunit­y to compose and orchestrat­e a little children’s fantasy for orchestra.” He likened the experience to working on “Home Alone” 26 years ago, especially “the lightheart­edness and fun of it. Even when scenes are threatenin­g or ominous, we know that it’s not serious.”

Williams composed more than 90 minutes of music for an 85-piece L.A. orchestra, including especially virtuosic parts for the flute section.

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