Empire (UK)

THE BLACKENING

THE ‘BLACK GUY DIES FIRST’ TROPE GETS A WELCOME RIPOSTE

- KIM NEWMAN

★★★ OUT 25 AUGUST / CERT 15 / 97 MINS

DIRECTOR Tim Story

CAST Dewayne Perkins, Grace Byers, Jermaine Fowler, Melvin Gregg, X Mayo, Antoinette Robertson, Sinqua Walls, Jay Pharoah

PLOT College friends hold a reunion in an isolated woodland retreat and are tormented by a games-playing psycho with a grudge.

IN A NOD to both Scream and Saw, The Blackening opens with a couple (Yvonne Orji, Jay Pharoah) arriving early at the lavish cabin in the woods where their all-black friend group is holding a ten-years-after-college get-together on Juneteenth — only to find a creepily racist talking board-game in the basement. This promises death if they can’t name a Black actor who survives a horror movie, with fatal consequenc­es if they get Jada Pinkett Smith’s performanc­es in Scream 2 and Demon Knight mixed up. After the prologue, a long stretch introduces characters and establishe­s complicate­d personal relationsh­ips. Observatio­nal stand-up material about Black culture plays out with the occasional masked lurker or false scare to keep the horror pot boiling.

Directed smartly by Tim Story — whose career (and credibilit­y) has see-sawed with Barbershop, two Fantastic Four movies, the Ride Alongs and Tom & Jerry: The Movie —

The Blackening is an expansion of a short by Dewayne Perkins (who hogs the showy ‘gay best friend’ role) and Tracy Oliver. While Jordan Peele uses horror to explore issues of race in contempora­ry America, this harks back to the broader approach of movies with titles like Blacula and Blackenste­in, reworking traditiona­l horror formats in an Africaname­rican context — with a lot of jokes about Black actors being the first to get killed in situations like this.

Some of the funniest stretches involve the gang of self-aware motormouth stereotype­s, mostly high on drugs, getting so caught up in arguments they are distracted from the life-or-death business of the blackface maniac with a crossbow out to pick them off one by one. One round of the game challenges the group to single out the Blackest member for murder — prompting an unlovely you’re blacker-than-me squabble.

Thanks to a standout ensemble — Antoinette Robertson, Grace Byers, Sinqua Walls, X Mayo, Melvin Gregg, Jermaine Fowler, plus Diedrich Bader as the one white character (Ranger White) — the film is consistent­ly funny. A few subtle gags — the guy who wastes their few precious bullets by doing that holding-the-gun-sideways thing — redeem the gross-out puke-in-the-killer’s-mask stuff.

A drawback is that it’s too soft. After the prologue, it’s surprising­ly reluctant to kill anyone off, never achieving the ruthlessne­ss of other recent slashers like, say, Bodies Bodies Bodies. The film is generally disposed to see the good side of cheating, betraying, bullying, gate-keeping characters and let them off with a stern lecture rather than pass Jigsaw-style, reverse-beartrap judgement.

VERDICT

The Blackening is shuddery entertainm­ent with more laughs than the entire Scary Movie franchise.

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 ?? ?? Here: Allison (Grace Byers), not keen on playing this game. Below: Lisa (Antoinette Robertson) comes over all Cluedo.
Here: Allison (Grace Byers), not keen on playing this game. Below: Lisa (Antoinette Robertson) comes over all Cluedo.

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