Jan 20, 2017
There's no filmmaker today who loves to throw audiences for a loop more than M. Night Shyamalan. For a while it worked, with "The Sixth Sense," "Unbreakable" and "Signs" all considered classics, and "The Village" also has its strong advocates, including myself. But following those four gems, he proceeded to make some of the worst movies of all time in "The Happening," "The Last Airbender" and "After Earth."
Shyamalan finally had to regroup in 2014 if he ever hoped to work again, and teamed up with low-budget-horror impresario Jason Blum, who revolutionized the horror genre by creating a string of hugely profitable hits (the "Paranormal Activity" and "Insidious" series) that were made for $5 million or less. The result was the fantastically fun thriller "The Visit," a tremendous comeback that grossed nearly $100 million worldwide off a tiny budget.
This weekend, he teams up again with Blum for the new thriller "Split," which follows the battle of wills between three teenage girls and a deranged man with 23 personalities who kidnaps them and traps them in a massive, creepy underground compound. The result is smartly written and expertly acted by James McAvoy as the kidnapper who displays eight personas in the course of the film, and Anna Taylor-Joy as Casey, the girl who is the sharpest at fighting back.
Yet it's also deeply unpleasant for much of its running time, as it's hard to call a movie centered on the endangerment of young women a crowd-pleaser. Of course, that works sometimes - as in the classic "The Silence of the Lambs " - but in this case it feels like the movie isn't walking the line just right.