The Arizona Republic

‘Come Play’ makes screen time into monster

- Bill Goodykoont­z

“Come Play” is a horror movie whose ideas are better than their execution.

That doesn’t make the ideas any less worthy. In his feature debut, writer and director Jacob Chase expands on his short film “Larry,” which was scary enough but mostly an exercise in creepy atmosphere and gotcha! scares. He’s incorporat­ed the loneliness born of so much time spent looking at screens — smart phones, TVs, computers, whatever — into a physical manifestat­ion: Larry, a monster who lives behind those screens, looking for a companion.

Which doesn’t work out so great for

the companion.

It’s a brilliant notion, and Chase knows his way around the tropes of horror films.

What works in ‘Come Play’ — and what doesn’t

What’s lacking is the story itself — he takes shortcuts with the narrative. Stuff just kind of happens at various points, important stuff, like the dissolutio­n of a marriage. In a movie about loneliness, which is what “Come Play” is at its core, that would seem like a topic worthy of further exploratio­n.

The film centers around Oliver (Azhy Robertson), a non-verbal autistic boy who uses an app on his phone to communicat­e. He loves “Spongebob Squarepant­s” but struggles socially at school. He’s bullied by a group of boys led by Byron (Winslow Fegley), with whom Oliver evidently was once friends.

One night Oliver’s phone lights up loaded with an e-book about a creature named Larry, who looks in the drawings kind of like the little brother of the monster from “Alien,” only modestly more humanoid. As Oliver pages through the story, we learn that Larry was once made fun of because he is different, and he is seeking a friend.

Of course Oliver is lonely and intrigued. But there are lights blinking on and off and things going bump in the night that scare him.

His mother, Sarah (Gillian Jacobs), comforts him. There are intimation­s that things are not going swimmingly with her and Oliver’s father, Marty (John Gallagher Jr.). These prove accurate when one night Marty leaves. Wait, what?

Off he goes, in an arrangemen­t worked out with Sarah previously, it seems, a developmen­t that typically would disturb Oliver. But he’s got even worse things to worry about at the moment — namely a scary monster that only he can see, and then only if he uses camera functions on his phone or tablet (a good use that allows Chase to frame the action in different ways).

That last is something Marty found at his job, working as a toll collector at a parking garage. After he brought the old tablet home from the lost and found, Oliver immediatel­y commandeer­s it. Larry’s story shows up there, too, and grows more detailed — and darker.

This is all effective — Chase has worked mostly as an editor, and he is good at setting the audience up.

Azhy Robertson nails his role as a terrified boy

He’s less effective working with actors — the adult ones, anyway. It’s not fair to say that Jacobs and Gallagher don’t have much chemistry together; their characters are having problems, after all. But they’re not given much to work with. He’s distant for much of the film (if not absent). Jacobs, meanwhile, is left to navigate Sarah’s complicate­d emotions and reactions. She’s not bad. She just has to play an arc that is not fully developed, and scream a lot.

But Robertson, who played the boy in “Marriage Story,” manages perfectly the tricky business of communicat­ing without words in even the most horrific circumstan­ces — and the sometimes heartening, sometimes heartbreak­ing relationsh­ip with Byron. The kids are great.

Horror movies are notoriousl­y tough to end well — how can the last act match the lead-up? But credit Chase with coming up with an ending that fits the mood of the rest of the film without selling out the audience emotionall­y.

“Come Play” is a promising debut, one that makes you interested in what Chase comes up with next.

 ?? JASPER SAVAGE/FOCUS FEATURES ?? Gillian Jacobs, left, and Azhy Robertson in a scene from “Come Play.”
JASPER SAVAGE/FOCUS FEATURES Gillian Jacobs, left, and Azhy Robertson in a scene from “Come Play.”

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