WaffleMovies.com

Nav Include
Home
 About
 Archives
 Contact
Recent Reviews:
Recent DVDs:
Devil Inside
The Grey
Albert Nobbs
The Vow
Haywire
New Year's Eve
Contraband
Pariah
Mission Impossible
Iron Lady
We Bought A Zoo
War Horse
In The Land
Extremely Loud
Hop
Dragon Tattoo
Muppets
Sitter
Tinker Tailor
Carnage
Young Adult
Descendants
Tin Tin
Week With Marilyn
Melancholia
Jack & Jill
Footloose
Like Crazy
Tower Heist
Mighty Macs
J. Edgar
Martha Marcy May Marlene
Rum Diary
Take Shelter
Twilight Breaking Dawn
Anonymous
Harold & Kumar XMas
In Time
Drive
Thing
Big Year
Real Steel
Paranormal 3
50/50
Ides of March
Moneyball
What's Your #?
Killer Elite
Higher Ground
Contagion
Afraid of the Dark
How She Does It
A Dolphin Tale
Midnight in Paris
Straw Dogs
Warrior
Planet of the Apes
Kung Fu Panda 2
Fright Night
Hangover Part 2
The Help
Cowboys & Aliens
The Debt
Smurfs
One Day
30 Minutes
Our Idiot Brother
Friends w/Benefits
Super 8
Conan
Larry Crowne
Harry Potter DH Part 2
Hot Trailers:
WAFFLE ON DC50-TV
BFCA
Willie Waffle

Create Your Badge



Buy My Book
Back Shelf Beauties










The Crazies
3 Waffles!

You know how much I hate nepotism and would rather mock the rich and the famous than laud them or even give them the faintest of praise. However, I can't deny the obvious (and it is killing me to my core). The spawn of Michael Eisner can direct. He must have made a second deal with the devil.

Timothy Olyphant (that guy who looks like a butcher, meaner Ryan Seacrest) stars as David Dutton - the sheriff of a small, rural Iowa farming town where everyone knows your name (which stinks if you are the town drunk or that guy who had an embarrassing moment involving a goat and funnel cake at the last county fair). Anyway, during the first high school baseball game of the spring, one of the town's residents marches onto the field with a shotgun. Before you know it, some in this Midwestern town are starting to become comatose, while others are becomingly alarmingly and unexplainably violent.

Can David find out what is causing this odd behavior?

Can he protect his friends and family?

While The Crazies is not the most amazing horror movie of the decade, director Breck Eisner knows how to set up a scene, build the tension without a great deal of fanfare mucking up your attention, then scare your underpants off. He picks great moments to get under your skin in minimalist fashion as the audience is focused on a runaway saw, a pitchfork dragging across the ground or the sound of a knife being scraped along the side of a wall.

Yes, we have some gory moments, but Eisner sparingly delivers them, and, usually, does so in a way that fits into the story rather than being exploitive. The Crazies is a movie more about the peril than the blood.

Even Olyphant won me over with his stoic performance. More than ever, he comes off as a strong leading man with a commanding presence on the screen. Much like the rest of the movie, Olyphant isn't delivering some Oscar winning performance, but he brings great intensity and gets you rooting for the good guys in a realistic portrayal that makes David an everyman, instead of some sort of superhero.

Unfortunately, writers Scott Kosar and Ray Wright (based on the original movie by George Romero) abandon the movie's mystery too soon. What makes The Crazies so frightening is the sense of isolation the audience feels as all of this takes place in the middle of nowhere, we wonder what might be causing it, and get the feeling no one in the world can possibly save these people because no one can ever realize this small town exists. However, it becomes more crowded and bigger before it should. This leads to The Crazies becoming more about the chase and less about the creepy factor.

The Crazies is a great surprise in the middle of the hard, long, cold winter.

The Crazies is rated R for bloody violence and language.


© 2008 WaffleMovies.com
Movie posters, stills, and DVD covers are © their respective studios and/or production companies.