Total Film

Poltergeis­t

They’re here. Again...

- Matt Glasby

If you really wanna make some money quick, a poltergeis­t abduction isn’t a bad idea...” So says paranormal investigat­or Boyd (Nicholas Braun) halfway into Gil Kenan’s slick update of the 1982 Steven Spielberg/Tobe Hooper spook film.

The executives at Ghost House Pictures ( Evil Dead, The Possession, Boogeyman), Sam Raimi’s currently underperfo­rming horror outlet, clearly feel the same. The original Poltergeis­t is more fondly remembered gateway flick than genre classic, but it displayed a singular mix of Hooperian peril and Spielbergi­an charm. So why bother remaking it? The studio claims it’s to “update an iconic brand”, words that are way more chilling than anything in the movie.

You know the story: nice family moves into not-nice house, although if parents Eric (Sam Rockwell) and Amy (Rosemarie DeWitt) had seen Insidious, they’d know giving their children surnames for first names was a bad idea. Thus we meet stage-school cutie Madison (Kennedi Clements – in the Heather O’Rourke role), worrisome mini-Jessie Eisenberg Griffin (Kyle Catlett) and sulky teen Kendra (Saxon Sharbino).

It’s not long before buying a house full of creaky attic bedrooms and inexplicab­ly locked cupboards proves a predictabl­y poor call. Although the family dynamic is well sketched by scripter David Lindsay-Abaire (a Pulitzer Prize winner, no less), Kenan is so eager to skip to the good bit, the film becomes a tick-list of 3D CG gotchas: the tree, the TV, the clowns plural. “Why would someone leave a box of clowns...” puzzles Griffin, the film’s second stupidest line after a groan-inducing comment about “an ancient tribal graveyard”.

Rockwell, as ever, is twitchily brilliant, whether cracking jokes (“Yeah, well, we got too many kids”) or just cracking up – the scene where he bursts into tears at the fate of his daughter, alone in the ether, feels joltingly real. And just when it seems like Kenan’s given up the ghost, comes a finale set amid freaky, flailing spirits that’s so imaginativ­ely staged it lifts the entire film (and demands to be seen in 3D). It still wouldn’t scare even the nerviest of 15 year olds, but then nobody seems clear who Poltergeis­t Mark II is aimed at. Too slight for adults, too silly for teens, too niche for the suits and too naff for the fans, it’s trapped in the kind of limbo you need more than an exorcist and a length of rope to escape from.

‘Buying a house full of inexplicab­ly locked cupboards is a poor call’

THE VERDICT Very tame, but saved from the remake scrapheap by Sam Rockwell’s surprising­ly touching performanc­e and a final reel that – briefly – takes the material somewhere new. › Certificat­e 15 Director Gil Kenan Starring Sam Rockwell, Rosemarie DeWitt, Jared Harris, Jane Adams, Kyle Catlett Screenplay David Lindsay-Abaire Distributo­r 20th Century Fox Running Time 93 mins

 ??  ?? Somebody turned the high five machine up to maximum again.
Somebody turned the high five machine up to maximum again.
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