Houston Chronicle

Nicolas Cage is gleefully unhinged in horror/comedy ‘Mom and Dad.’

- By Noel Murray

Early in Brian Taylor’s edgy horror-comedy “Mom and Dad,” snarling suburbanit­e Brent Ryan descends on his shrieking son Josh, while playing a game of “tickle monster.”

The scene illustrate­s what “Mom and Dad” has going for it: a gleefully unhinged Nicolas Cage performanc­e, and an understand­ing that the line between parental affection and violent hostility is thin.

Taylor makes his solo debut as a writer-director, bringing the same anything-goes style that marked his long partnershi­p with Mark Neveldine (on films like “Crank”). Frenetic pacing and darkly comic sight gags add pungent flavor to Taylor’s story, which imagines what’d happen if a mass infection caused parents to murder their offspring.

Selma Blair plays Kendall Ryan, the mother of petulant teen Carly (Anne Winters) and mischievou­s brat Josh (Zackary Arthur). Once Kendall and Brent catch the bug, “Mom and Dad” becomes like a sick version of “Home Alone,” with multiple generation­s of the Ryan family shooting and stabbing each other.

The comic incongruit­y of doting parents stalking children becomes less funny over time; and often it feels like Taylor hasn’t thought through the particular­s of his premise, or the places he could’ve taken it.

But there’s something poignant about the many scenes of Kendall and Brent recalling the sexy, rebellious, vital people they used to be. The ultimate point of “Mom and Dad” is that it doesn’t take a rage virus to make a middle-aged man want to put on his old Misfits T-shirt and smash something.

 ?? Momentum Pictures ?? A rage virus causes Nicolas Cage’s character to stalk his teenage children in the horror/comedy “Mom and Dad.”
Momentum Pictures A rage virus causes Nicolas Cage’s character to stalk his teenage children in the horror/comedy “Mom and Dad.”

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