What I Liked: David Prior directed the shit out of this movie. It looks beautiful, the casting is good, the performances are great, the editing is mostly well done, the atmosphere is unsettling, there are many varied locations, the production design is cool, the pacing is methodical, etc. Prior’s background involves a lot of behind-the-scenes documentaries including the making of a bunch of David Fincher films. All that time studying other excellent filmmakers must have given him a unique education on the craft where he could pick up techniques through osmosis. So with this picture you have this interesting blend of styles like what if David Fincher shot a Wes Craven script? The technical aspects are far and away the film’s best quality.
They really went for something. Even though I don’t think this thing comes
together I admire its ambitious story. I
don’t think I’ve come across a horror film exactly like it.
What I Didn’t Like: Ok folks this is gonna get dicey
so I’ll do my best to explain why this bird doesn’t land for me before going
into spoilers. There are essentially two
films happening at once (you could conceivably argue three films with the
ending). One is about an urban legend called
the Empty Man where you can summon him by whistling across the top of an empty
bottle on a bridge at night and think intensely about him while doing so. You know, similar to Bloody Mary or Candyman
where you stare into a mirror and say their name five times to curse
yourself. Over the course of three days
the Empty Man will stalk you and eventually kill you. Plot two is about a teen girl who goes
missing and an ex-cop friend of the family, James (James Badge Dale (Little
Woods)), tries to track her down only to discover she was involved with a
cult obsessed with the Empty Man. This
story is definitely the more interesting one because it builds wonderful
mystery and suspense. James ventures
deeper and deeper into what this dangerous organization is and the weird ass
supernatural shit they’re tapping into. While
the two stories are dependent on one another they don’t exactly link up
successfully. The payoff ends up being
the worst of both worlds with the movie not committing to being either a full
on slasher monster situation or a creepy blood thirsty cult jam. For some the ending could tie everything
together in a mind blowing way but for me it’s this awkward beast of curiosity
and disappointment.
*Spoilers* Alright, so we go through all this sleuthing and all this building up of the Empty Man and all this mounting tension to come to the conclusion that basically none of it is real. Well maybe some of it is real. Honestly I don’t fucking know. It turns out the cult manifested James, an actual adult human person, into existence when we met him three days prior. He’s been kept locked up in a room for that time. So everything we’ve gone through with him are fabricated memories. The reason for this is the cult wants to use James to communicate with and worship the Empty Man, which is some sort of supernatural being. This group has been around for hundreds (or thousands?) of years and uses a human bridge to relay communication between the Empty Man and his followers. Their current messenger is dying (this is what that twenty minute opening in Bhutan relates to) and sometimes they’ve had to wait a long ass time for someone else to come along so they decided to create one in James. In essence James was the Empty Man all along. Truthfully guys, I don’t have a goddamn clue if I got any of this right. If I did then this is only slightly better than the god awful it-was-all-a-dream or it-was-all-in-your-head trope. At least this doesn’t dismiss the existence of the Empty Man or any of the supernatural shit. But at the same time it effectively negates everything you just watched. Nor does it explain why the Empty Man fucks with and then kills people like in a standard horror picture, or why it takes him three days to attack, or why a cursed person can possess others to kill for them, or why all the deaths are made to look like suicides or accidents or bizarre acts, or ok, you get the idea. We don’t really learn anything about this creature. Why it does what it does is never explained. Or maybe they did and I missed it. Another question you might be asking is why does the cult wanna get with the Empty Man in the first place? World domination? Superpowers? Great wealth? Not sure. Again, they may have said but if they did I missed it.
Overall Impressions: Man, I want to like this. Prior and co elevated the hell out of a not
very good script. From what I gather the
graphic novel it’s based on is pretty different so maybe something got lost in
translation. Or it could be as much of a
mess as this. All the goodwill the
filmmakers build up by doling out the mystery at the right pace to keep you
interested unfortunately kinda gets flushed down the toilet with the ending.
Ironically The Empty Man isn’t empty but it ain’t
full either. I completely understand why
it bombed. When this got dumped out in
2020 the few people that saw it did not care for it. I mean marketing the film must’ve been a
nightmare as well. It doesn’t fall
neatly into a category so I don’t envy the people who had to try to sell this strange
complex horror/thriller premise. And it
doesn’t help that the title is so generic with other “Man” movies like Slender
Man, The Boogeyman and The Bye Bye Man released around the same
time. I know I confused all of them.
If any of this sounds intriguing then go ahead and check out
this fascinating oddity of a picture.
For most folks though I can’t recommend it.
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