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Tuesday, January 24

Split


There is a certain expectation when viewing an M. Night Shyamalan film. He is the modern master of suspense, but has been so inconsistent that you don’t know which identity will show up. Will it be a well-written, Hitchcockian film, or a sloppy, disappointing mess? Perhaps the anticipation of which Shyamalan shows up will be enough to satisfy your thirst for entertainment, but it was merely a distraction for me.

Art imitates life as Shyamalan takes on DID (Dissociative Identity Disorder) as the centerpiece of his latest attempt to thrill and chill. Kevin (James McAvoy) has twenty-three distinct personalities, all competing for his attention. Collectively called “the horde”, they range from a nine-year boy to a proper British woman, and some are more docile than others. When Dennis kidnaps three young women as an offering for the looming twenty-fourth personality, it is a struggle for survival and escape.

James McAvoy is fantastic in a role that was originally intended for Joaquin Phoenix (I would have loved to see that). He is a young boy, an old lady, a gay fashion designer, a ruthless pedophile and a scared man who knows he is mentally ill all in one. Now, we don’t get a chance to see all twenty-three personalities (or is it twenty-four?) but the ones we do meet are meticulously created and acted. McAvoy puts on a clinic in what certainly was a whole lot of fun for him to perform.

The sparse supporting cast is comprised of three scared, young women and an elderly psychiatrist, but our lead is Casey (Anya Taylor-Joy). She teases a secret from the very start of the film as there is something not quite right about her stoic demeanor. We are treated to a narrative description of DID through the eyes of Dr. Fletcher (veteran actress Betty Buckley), who is treating the afflicted man and attempting to break through his disorder to find the real Kevin.

Shyamalan is an interesting writer/director. About a third of his films are fantastic, a third is disappointing, and a third are awful. His next project gives me great hope however. He’s resurrecting the old HBO franchise, “Tales from the Crypt”. As a young’un, I was enthralled by the creepy stories and cautionary tales, as cheesy as some of them were. It is entirely possible that a series of thirty-minute vignettes is exactly what M. Night needs to get back on track with his artistic expression. Coming out later in 2017, this is a series you definitely need to keep on your radar.

I’m a fan of Shyamalan, and won’t give up on him. There is a bubbling excitement that I get every time I sit down to watch one of his movies, and although it usually ends in disappointment, there is always that hope that the twist will be a gem. I found myself predicting and guessing throughout the whole film, and in the end, was left feeling cheated, which was much more of a letdown than a typical bad movie delivers. Maybe Shyamalan needs to collaborate so that the endings that he probably finds clever are more reflective of his potential.

“Split” is entertaining. It goes off the rails a bit with some of the back stories, and the ending is disappointing, but anticipating the twist (if you can call it that) and enjoying McAvoy’s portrayal of multiple, eccentric characters is good enough for me. I would skip “Split” and watch last year’s “The Visit” instead if you want a thrill. Unless you already know the twist. 5/10.

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