‘Searching’ finds a clever mystery
It is hard enough to come up with a plausible mystery story for a feature film that has enough legitimate twists and turns to make it interesting without having to cheat on the payoff. Too often, the big surprise ends up being a major disappointment because what was coming was as obvious as the ending to a cheap romance novel.
Toss in a completely unorthodox way of putting the production together, and there are an almost infinite numberof ways for the project to crash and burn. And when it comes to veering away from the familiar path, few productions have gone into such a crazy creative orbit as “Searching.”
Despite so many ways to go wrong, “Searching” works both as a smart and fascinating thriller and a wonderfully creative way of telling the tale. The best part is that writer/director Aneesh Chaganty never had to resort to any unfounded leaps in the story just to get to his conclusion. He establishes a compelling story, spreads the clues in plain sight and then brings it all together in a satisfying and tantalizing finale.
Let’s start with the story. After David Kim’s (John Cho) teenage daughter goes missing, a local police investigation is opened with Detective Vick (Debra Messing) assigned to the case. When no leads surface after a day and a half, Kim decides to search the one place no one has looked — his daughter’s laptop. This is a world full of dead ends, revelations about the teen and a source of potential clues to what has happened.
Along with producing a taut thriller, Mr. Chaganty balances the story with human moments. It takes only a few moments during the opening to establish the relationship between father, mother and daughter. Once an investment is made in them, the twists and turns come through with far more tension.
Nestled between these two major story elements is a compelling commentary about what it means to live in a world where social media is more addictive than most drugs. The need to be validated is often beaten into submission by the cruelty of the faceless beings typing away at their keyboard. This is a world of connections and misconnections.
All of these plot points are delivered through a cinematic format that has never been used to this extent. Instead of the standard filmmaking practice of pointing cameras at actors and editing together their actions and responses captured from multiple angles, Mr. Chaganty opts to tell his story as though the viewer was seated at a computer screen next to the distraught dad.
The images are a mix of computer screens where the father searches for information with conversations held via Skype. The director mixes the computer images with television news reports, cell phone conversations, security camera footage and any bit of technology used to capture digital images. What this does is strip away the conventional wall that separates the actors and audience pulling both together into a new symbiotic way of telling and seeing a story.
This in-your-face style only works if Mr. Cho can get across the emotions of the moment even when dialogue is jettisoned in preference to seeing the images from the computer screen. Mr. Cho’s face sells each drop of emotions from angry parent to terrified father.
Mr. Chaganty has put together with “Searching” evidence that a film can be technologically different without having to reject elements like fascinating characters, clever storytelling and deep personal moments. In the case of “Searching,” go for the story and stay for the visual design.