![]() ![]() These scenes are formulaic, though they're at least well-paced and blocked. The Gunns' contempt for their characters is apparent throughout, but especially whenever Brandon stalks his victims. ![]() Beyond that: Brian and Mark Gunn's screenplay (produced by brother James) is a toothless, vague indictment of its ideal audience: hormonal fanboys who are just as likely to torrent a superhero bonanza, like the James-Gunn-helmed " Guardians of the Galaxy" as they would a gore-fest, like the James-Gunn-scripted " The Belko Experiment." ![]() These characters don't just make bad decisions because they're in denial: their constant failure to act like sympathetic, recognizably human characters is the only consistent thing about the people of Brightburn. I don't really know why, except that this movie was obviously made by horror fans who are trying to outdo/pay homage to their favorite splatter flicks. That delayed response is not a trenchant insight about a certain type of person: it's just a patience-testing, but necessary plot contrivance. What do we even know about the Brightburnians, other than they go hunting, they drink, they paint, and, in the case of Kyle and Tori, they have an adopted alien child? Apparently, Tori wanted to have a kid a lot more than Kyle did, but that's not apparent until the movie's almost over. Maybe life is different in Brightburn, but it's hard to know how, given that so much of his story follows him, an obviously disturbed child, as he systematically murders everybody around him. That's a great theme, but: Brandon's parents and neighbors are so trusting and loving that they're barely human at all. That's the biggest idea in "Brightburn," I guess: Heartland Americans want to believe in innocence, goodness, and relatability so much that they presumably wouldn't notice an Evil Killer until it's too late, especially if Evil looks like a white male pre-teen. Brandon's parents, Kyle and Tori ( David Denman and Elizabeth Banks), are especially unsure about what might be happening to their kid, even though they know that he's an alien-who, like Superman, mysteriously crash-landed when he was just a baby-and is therefore not completely familiar.īut for some reason, it takes a little while before Kyle and Tori notice Brandon's erratic behavior. No, something's wrong with the people of Brightburn, though it's never really clear what. Merilee ( Meredith Hagner), Brandon's aunt and school guidance counselor, isn't much more helpful: she texts her husband to say "Good night" seconds after her motion-detecting security alarm repeatedly goes off and Brandon shows up at her front door in the middle of the night, just to say that it wouldn't be a good idea if Merilee said anything bad about him to Sheriff Deever. But generally speaking, Williams' laughably useless Sheriff Deever takes his sweet time while investigating Brandon. Granted, a local sheriff (Gregory Alan Williams) does show up right after Brandon's first (very public) act of violence. Dunn), a gawky 12-year-old with super-powers and a temper. It takes three deaths and one horrible maiming for anybody to call 911 about Brandon Breyer ( Jackson A. ![]()
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