The Hamilton Spectator

McAvoy shines in M. Night Shyamalan’s Split

- KATIE WALSH Tribune News Service

Through the ups and downs of his career, the name M. Night Shyamalan has always been synonymous with one thing: twist. While watching his films, it’s easy to spend more time wondering if he will, won’t, and how he’ll twist, and it can take away the power of what’s actually on screen. Which is a shame when the filmmaking and performanc­es are particular­ly exceptiona­l. In the multiple-personalit­y psycho-thriller “Split,” James McAvoy and Anya TaylorJoy shine as predator and prey who understand each other far more than they know.

As Kevin/Barry/Dennis/Patricia/Hedwig/Orwell/Jade, McAvoy ferociousl­y sinks his teeth into the role of a troubled young man who developed dissociati­ve identity disorder as a coping mechanism to deal with a turbulent, abusive childhood. He kept his 23 personalit­ies in control with the help of an understand­ing therapist, Dr. Fletcher (Betty Buckley), but the darker procliviti­es have taken over, and he kidnaps three young girls to satisfy those urges.

While McAvoy is known for his dramatic roles, and as the young Charles Xavier in the “X-Men” franchise, he’s delightful when let off the leash and allowed to show off his loud, campy, unhinged side. While this performanc­e could have descended into a “James McAvoy Does Accents” YouTube video of sorts, he’s far too skilled as an actor for that. Each of his characters has unique gestures and facial physicalit­y, and McAvoy slides seamlessly from one to another in single takes.

Dr. Fletcher has gained her patient’s trust by believing in the autonomy of each persona, and suggesting that his condition could reveal a higher evolution of humanity, positionin­g his mental disorder

as almost supernatur­al powers. Buckley is wonderful, and casting her is genius — a nod to “Carrie,” another psychologi­cal horror thriller about a victim who found a way to turn plight into power, in which Buckley had a similar role.

Kevin (or is it Dennis?) meets his match in Casey (Anya Taylor-Joy), a teen who accidental­ly happens to be with intended victims Claire (Haley Lu Richardson) and Marcia (Jessica Sula) at the time of the kidnapping. She’s thoughtful, quiet and composed, thinking rather than acting impulsivel­y out of their predicamen­t, drawing on lessons learned from hunting trips with her father and uncle.

While Kevin’s disorder could indicate a higher evolution, he has the basest of instincts — an appetite for nubile young women isn’t exactly original. He’s a fascinatin­g character, but Shyamalan retreats to the tried-and-true formulas for this genre. It’s tiresome to see yet another movie where yet more young women are stripped and locked in a basement.

Despite this, Shyamalan demonstrat­es a mastery over the form of the mean and lean psychothri­ller, aided in no small party by the performanc­es of McAvoy, Taylor-Joy and Buckley, and smooth-yet-unsettling camera work by cinematogr­apher Michael Gioulakis. The camera swaps character point-of-view rapidly, inhabiting both victim and kidnapper, watcher and watched. As the tension ratchets up, odd and off-putting camera angles and extreme close-ups emulate the cracks in reality.

Shyamalan brings victim and victimizer together to make a powerful (if a bit facile) statement about drawing power from pain, turning trauma into strength. That concept is the subtext of the horror genre, and Shyamalan smartly makes it manifest as the driving message of “Split.”

 ?? UNIVERSAL PICTURES ?? Anya Taylor-Joy, left, and James McAvoy, right, are worthy adversarie­s in “Split.”
UNIVERSAL PICTURES Anya Taylor-Joy, left, and James McAvoy, right, are worthy adversarie­s in “Split.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada