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Monday, January 18th, 2010
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Movie Title: White Noise
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It is a top-notch surprise to scoot into a movie expecting to abhor it, and to leave the theater ecstatic.

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Having read some of the reviews on this area, as well as some professional reviewers, I consider they’ve missed the point of this film entirely. Reviewers on this position have also gotten their facts foul. For example, Keaton has been in three movies since Jack Frost (yes, I agree that film was a concern), and he served as the Executive Producer on another.

Jonathan Rivers’ (Keaton) wife dies in a car accident and like all husbands who love their wives, he grieves. One day he sees a man sitting in an SUV across the street from his house, and when he gets to work that same day, the man is sitting on a bench across the street. Rivers rushes out to ask why he is following him, and the man introduces himself as Raymond Trace (Ian McNeice) . Label claims that Keaton’s wife has passed over, and that she has communicated with him. Rivers immediately dismisses this, but Mark leaves him with a card, asking that he maintain it.

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The movie skips ahead six months, and we rep Rivers bewitching into a novel apartment. Unlike the home he shared with his wife, it is forbidding and cold: the walls are either blocked glass or grey cement.

Then he receives a phone call on his cell, and the “name” that comes up is “Anna’s Cell”. He rushes home and pulls out the bag of effects that the police gave him from the crash; one of the items therein is Anna’s cell phone. It’s off. Then he receives another call, this one while he is holding Anna’s cell phone, and it too is from “Anna’s Cell”.

One morning at 2:30 the beeping of his answering machine awakens him. He gets out of bed and finds that there is one message. He plays it, and it is garbled with static.

These oddities are enough to cause Rivers to contact Heed, and Rivers is introduced to the world of EVP, a phenomenon whereby one can receive messages from loved ones that have passed on through recorded white noise, and sometimes cause images on a monitor. Ticket has, literally, hundreds of video tapes and recordings, and he plays Rivers the convey of his wife, which, I maintain, said something along the lines of “I savor you John”. With the white noise, it was hard to issue. Here’s the first possibility of a “gaping state hole” – Rivers immediately believes it is true, and becomes obsessed with getting to the next level of communication: seeing her face on a television shroud. I have to agree that I notion he bought into it a slight too quickly; however, hearing the divulge of one’s monotonous spouse can evoke emotions that beget a person do things they normally wouldn’t. As a person who has lost a spouse, trust me on this, I know.

Before Rivers is able to acquire to the next level Imprint winds up dumb, all of his monitors and audio equipment (of which there was a powerful amount) destroyed, with Notice buried underneath them.

This causes Rivers to plot up a plot of his enjoy in his home, where he all too expeditiously develops a big facility with highly advanced equipment. That may be another gaping residence hole, but it’s forgivable. Do we really want to gaze Rivers poring through training manuals and teaching himself how to utilize this equipment? Of course not. *That* would be humdrum and unessential to the site.

Assisting him is a client of Price’s that he met when he first visited, Sarah Tate (Deborah Karah Unger) . The more time Rivers spends with his believe equipment, the more obsessed he becomes, to the point of having his ex-wife discover their son for longer periods, to flatly ignoring his son when he has physical custody. (That’s unforgivable, but understandable when caught in the throes of an obsession.)

After a frustrating amount of time where nothing happens, suddenly he starts receiving messages from his wife. They’re no longer the simple I Cherish You messages, but are instructive, telling him to go to clear places to do people.

This is where the movie gets bright, because this is where the terror element kicks into high gear – and this is where I gained titanic respect for the film. We had already received hints of external interference (apparitions), and we launch to view more of them. There were several scenes where typical cheap fear frights could have been inserted honest to acquire someone to squeal, but the director showed stout restraint, and for that I have stout respect for him.

The ending was a complete surprise, and a very satisfying one, as it doesn’t demolish like virtually every standard, schlock panic movie – which our country seems to build as rapidly as rabbits procreate. You don’t need to be a genius, but you need to consider about the ending, and remember bits of what has happened earlier in the film. If you don’t pay attention, you’ll miss it, and it might create the entire film seem irrelevant. But if you do pay attention, and you understand what is going on (I’ll honest say this: pay stop attention to the fact that in the final sequence there is a position of monitors *just like Sign and Rivers had* – and what could that possibly be for), it makes for a very clever ending.

The dénouement is touching, although the final concept the movie presented to us was unnecessary, and almost trustworthy as a plain fear movie ruse, which this movie avoided almost entirely. Thankfully.

I plan to myself as I left the theater: finally, a fright movie whose main goal wasn’t to originate me hop out of my seat through cheap tricks, is well filmed, well acted, and directed with subtlety instead of a ham handed hammer and a bag chunky of tricks.

PLOT: After Jonathan’s wife dies in a car smash, a man comes to Jonathan telling him that he can contact the spirit of his wife through EVP. (EVP is when images and sounds of the insensible advance through on electronic devices, such as on blank radio or TV stations.) Initially resistant to this, Jonathan finally hears some garbled messages from his wife, and decides to contact her further. He sets up a multi-TV/VCR/radio location in his apartment, and attempts to see her. But the messages he receives include the image of three shady looking figures, and then he begins getting images on the TV of people not yet tedious…

MY THOUGHTS: If you’re looking for a movie to anxiety the daylights out of you, White Noise unbiased might do the job. However, most of its scares relies on “BOO!” moments: BANG! A screaming face pops into the calmly fuzzing white noise on the TV. Deliver! A freight truck cuts in front of Jonathan’s minivan.

While the scares are mostly effective, they accumulate monotonous after a while. The atmosphere of the movie is well-kept and lustrous instead of eerie and haunting, and when it’s over, you’re left with the feeling that you’ve suffered through ten or twelve heart attacks, but with no genuine spooky chills down your spine.

The location is greatly flawed, suffering from a VERY unimaginative and uninteresting beginning and a rushed ending that fails to elaborate what exactly happened to the characters. Lots of aspects of the site (the three black figures, for instance) are left dangling. Also, sure aspects of the EVP images require a suspension of disbelief: Like, how do they appear on the mask? Who frames these shots? A ghost cameraman?

I gave this movie 3 stars because it does what it’s required to do: to horror you, even though it did utilize cheap scares to do it. I docked 2 stars off due to the movie’s inconsistent pacing, thin atmosphere, and unanswered questions at the slay.