Total Film

GLASS

Pane and gain…

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Shyamalan smashes it again – or does he?

GOUT 18 JANUARY

lass caps off M. Night Shyamalan’s ‘Eastrail 177’ trilogy, following Unbreakabl­e (2000) and Split (2016). Unlike its forerunner­s, though, it lacks the element of surprise: Unbreakabl­e was a covert comic-book movie and Split a secret sequel, while Glass is known to be the crossover film linking them. As a result, it comes laden with expectatio­ns that it never quite lives up to.

Like a really stripped-back Avengers, Glass throws together characters from standalone films: Split’s Kevin Wendell Crumb (James McAvoy) and his 23 other personalit­ies cross paths with indestruct­ible security schlub David Dunn (Bruce Willis) and brittle-boned criminal mastermind Elijah Price, aka Mr. Glass (Samuel L. Jackson). Kevin and hulking alter-ego, the Beast, are still at large, while David has earned various nicknames for his vigilante efforts. It’s no spoiler to say the film opens with David on the hunt for Kevin.

Kevin, David and Elijah swiftly end up incarcerat­ed (as seen in the trailers), where Dr. Ellie Staple (a slightly hammy Sarah Paulson) studies them as part of her research into people who believe they are superheroe­s. While Shyamalan’s decision to keep the scale contained is admirable, you do hanker for something a bit more epic from this long-awaited culminatio­n, and the lethargic pace seems unnecessar­y given we’ve already had two films of slow-burn build-up.

It both tantalises and frustrates that Glass is speckled with moments of greatness. The opening 20 minutes with David on the prowl are terrific, and exactly the sort of thing Unbreakabl­e fans have been waiting for. McAvoy once again gives a virtuoso performanc­e, flitting in and out of personalit­ies with ease. Samuel L. Jackson is also charismati­c fun, particular­ly when Elijah’s masterplan eventually starts clicking into place.

While it’s nice to see Willis taking a break from direct-to-DVD duds, David’s stoic muscularit­y doesn’t lend itself to being locked in a cell. Much of the emotional heavy-lifting is done by the core trio’s family and acquaintan­ces: David’s son and Elijah’s mum (Spencer Treat Clark and Charlayne Woodard reprising their roles from Unbreakabl­e) and Kevin’s former captive Casey (Anya Taylor-Joy). Elijah is gifted some affecting flashbacks, but recycled Unbreakabl­e clips are an unflatteri­ng reminder of just how good that film was.

spotting the cracks

Shyamalan clearly knows his comics, and delights in having his characters point out the convention­s. But it can make for a superhero movie that plays to the head more than the heart, and works better as a conversati­on-starter (‘What if superheroe­s are real?’) than as a cinematic experience. The plodding pace also allows a bit too much time to ponder the plot holes and guess at character motivation­s. Why would a facility designed to hold three individual­s with superhuman abilities have such slack security?

The film comes close to delivering on its potential when Elijah is back in Mr. Glass mode and the final showdown nears, but the frankly silly denouement earns eye rolls. This is clearly one ‘for the fans’, but those fans might have had their hearts set on a more rousing conclusion. Matt Maytum

THE VERDICT

Shyamalan concludes his secret trilogy with a film easier to admire than love. McAvoy is terrific again, but Glass doesn’t quite live up to the lofty heights of Unbreakabl­e and Split.

 ??  ?? CERTIFICAT­E 15 DIRECTOR M. Night Shyamalan STARRING Samuel L. Jackson, Bruce Willis, James McAvoy, Sarah Paulson, Anya Taylor-Joy SCREENPLAY M. Night Shyamalan DISTRIBUTO­R Disney RUNNING TIME 129 mins Even McAvoy’s impressed by his performanc­e. Well, one of him is anyway…
CERTIFICAT­E 15 DIRECTOR M. Night Shyamalan STARRING Samuel L. Jackson, Bruce Willis, James McAvoy, Sarah Paulson, Anya Taylor-Joy SCREENPLAY M. Night Shyamalan DISTRIBUTO­R Disney RUNNING TIME 129 mins Even McAvoy’s impressed by his performanc­e. Well, one of him is anyway…

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