10 Cloverfield Lane
Dir: Dan Trachtenberg
Starring: John Goodman, Mary Elizabeth Winstead, and John Gallagher
Jr.
Paramount Pictures
103 Minutes
It’s hard to keep a secret these days. Somehow “10
Cloverfield Lane”, the follow-up to J.J. Abrams’ science fiction blockbuster
“Cloverfield”, stayed relatively dormant and well off the radars of film fans
until a few months ago. In today’s anticipation heavy movie industry, where
films are planned out and detailed years in advance, it would seem a difficult
task to maintain the secrecy of a film as big as this one. The lack of
information and equally vague trailer was an interesting move for this
mysterious offering, a move that after watching the film proves to have been a
successful and calculated one. “Cloverfield” utilized the first-person
perspective to give the film a frantic, for some stomach turning, experience,
“10 Cloverfield Lane” relies on more traditional methods in building a tension
filled mystery that watches two people waiting out the end of the world in a
bunker dictated by a crazed doomsday survivalist.
Michelle (Mary Elizabeth Winstead) is frustrated with her
relationship and in the process of leaving the city. While driving through the
countryside, listening to her boyfriend apologize, her car is violently hit and
thrown off the road. Michelle wakes up in a small room with a locked door, she
is chained up to the wall. Howard (John Goodman) is the person who rescued her;
not only from the car crash but the world disaster that he claims has poisoned
the air. Howard has brought Michelle to his underground disaster bunker with
another survivor named Emmett (John Gallagher Jr.), a bunker controlled
menacingly by Howard.
For a film that runs 105 minutes long, it sure does make the
most out of a simple premise. Here, the story is basically woman gets trapped
then woman must escape. But director Dan Trachtenberg utilizes much of the
waiting game to establish some clever moments of tension while slowly closing
in the narrative walls to make the claustrophobic atmosphere even more
unnerving. It works exceptionally well in the beginning, especially when the
narrative and conventions play with the expectations of the audience, like in
an early scene around the dinner table where the viewer is coaxed into guessing
how everything will play out. While it does go on a bit too long in the end,
the successful moments of tension and the threatening cat-and-mouse aspects help
in holding attention throughout.
The unnerving aspects can be attributed to the meticulous
pacing in the script, however its successful execution should be largely
credited to the capable abilities of John Goodman who is menacing,
intimidating, cracked, and any other word one would use to describe the quality
of fear evoked by his character. Whether with an offhanded smirk, the emphasis
of how he expresses certain sentences, or with purposeful and subtle mannerisms
and gestures, Mr. Goodman nails every scene. Mary Elizabeth Winstead is also
good, portraying a resilient and tough young woman, she stands toe-to-toe with
Mr. Goodman in the quiet scenes and the violent ones.
Maintaining secrecy during production ultimately helped
preserve the mystery found in “10 Cloverfield Lane”. There is nothing overly
exceptional going on here, just simple techniques accommodating a simple story
with satisfying results. While it may have taken a little too much time moving
into its final act, the payoff during and in the end is worth the wait. For
those looking for a big monster movie with action and explosions, you won’t
find much of that here. For those looking for a calculated thriller with great
performances, prepare to be entertained.
Monte’s Rating
3.75 out of 5.00
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