Houston Chronicle

The twist is the thing in James Wan’s ‘Malignant’

- By Michael Ordoa

Can a movie that’s deficient in just about every way be redeemed by an original twist? In the case of “Malignant,” the answer is … sort of.

Directed by James Wan (who has bona fides in both horror — “Saw,” the “Conjuring” and “Insidious” franchises — and blockbuste­rs — “Aquaman,” “Furious 7”), the action kicks off with staff at a dubious hospital in an obvious CGI setting dealing with a murderous patient’s rampage. “Time to cut out the cancer,” says one doctor in what sounds like a stab at a tagline.

Decades later, very pregnant Madison (Annabelle Wallis) is getting roughed up by her awful husband. One horrible murder later, Madison begins experienci­ng visions of grisly crimes that seem connected to that sinister and sketchy old institutio­n. Can Madison’s happy actress sister Sydney (Maddie Hasson) and suspicious­ly good-looking Detective Kekoa Shaw (George Young) unravel the mystery before more people meet gruesome ends?

No, they can’t. There’s plenty of gruesome to go around. Which

is not to say “Malignant,” which was not screened for review until the night before its release, succeeds as a scary movie — it does not. It’s not creepy, it relies on highly improbable decisions, and it throws jump scares and sliderhapp­y sound design at the wall hoping something will stick. The direction feels uninspired. Slow push-in after slow push-in and other unmotivate­d camera moves, plus copious fog-machine work and a poorly deployed score stand in for atmosphere or

tension.

The dialogue throughout is remarkably flat, even for the genre. And it’s more annoying than usual that characters don’t behave believably. (Are you sure you want to stroll into the superhuman killer’s dark lair alone? Police procedure — what’s that?)

There’s no character developmen­t to speak of, though the two nice ladies (Hasson and a crime-scene technician played by Ingrid Bisu, who also shares a story credit) going gaga over the handsome detective each make you root for them. The nearest the movie comes to human interactio­n is in those moments, marking them as the only characters you’re hoping don’t die. It’s not applicable to critique the acting because there’s so little attention paid to making anyone on screen feel like a real person; even the excellent McKenna Grace, as young Madison, and legendary stuntwoman Zoe Bell aren’t given enough to stand out.

That said, the film’s big reveal is a doozy. It’s that rarity for the genre — an original twist (that obviously will not be spoiled here). Many of the bells and whistles around it are predictabl­e, and it takes a long time to get to it, but once it emerges, the movie becomes a lot more fun. In fact, it transforms from a halfhearte­d horror specimen to an enjoyable action movie. It’s the kind of thing that could generate actual buzz, or at least a substantia­l cult following, for an otherwise underachie­ving film. (Especially with Warner Bros.’ 2021 strategy of a simultaneo­us release in theaters and on HBO Max.)

If you can hang with the slow gestation of the first hour or so of “Malignant,” the final third may grow on you.

 ?? Warner Bros. ?? Annabelle Wallis stars in “Malignant.”
Warner Bros. Annabelle Wallis stars in “Malignant.”

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