[Movie Review] ‘Split’ holds no surprises

Split (United International Pictures)
Split (United International Pictures)

This slideshow requires JavaScript.

Should you watch this if it’s free? Okay.

Should you watch this at weekday movie ticket prices? No.

Score: 1.9/5

Secret ending? No.

Running time: 117 minutes (~2 hours)

“Split” is a horror-thriller that is a spiritual successor to “Unbreakable”.

The film is about a dissociative identity disorder patient who has multiple personalities. When the personalities discover that there is a more powerful personality that is physically stronger than them, they scheme to release this personality through a series of kidnappings.

“Split” is directed and written by M. Night Shyamalan. It stars James McAvoy (Kevin Wendell Crumb), Anya Taylor-Joy (Casey Cooke), Betty Buckley (Dr Karen Fletcher), Haley Lu Richardson (Claire Benoit), Jessica Sula (Marcia), with a cameo by Bruce Willis (David Dunn). It is rated PG-13.

“Split” had a great trailer and a premise that showed such promise. It was a movie that you thought would have a gripping story, dramatic twists, and a breathtaking performance by James McAvoy. It also started as an intense, emotional story that devolved into a run-of-the-mill thriller with everything playing out exactly as you’d imagine. It’s not a terrible movie by any stretch, just a disappointing one.

Highlights

An interesting spin on the premise

By default, any film about multiple personalities is generally interesting, since seeing the different facets of a person appeals to us on a personal level. “Split” takes this premise and ramps it up to the extreme with 23 different personalities and a secret personality that the other personalities must release (or thwart, depending on the side you’re rooting for). It’s already an interesting premise, and by adding a new perspective to it, the film becomes truly engaging… at first.

Letdowns

You don’t empathise with the different personalities

James McAvoy just isn’t convincing enough to make you feel for the different personalities that he portrays. Perhaps it’s due to the fact that they can’t have backstories or tragic pasts (or rather, that they share the same one). While you can differentiate him in his different personas, you don’t sympathise with any of Kevin’s (James McAvoy) personalities. It’s difficult to root for one character or the other as a result.

Relies too much on coincidences and contrivances

The problem is that most of what happens is a matter of characters stumbling upon the right information by chance, instead of getting it through their own efforts. There’s also the matter of Kevin’s hideout — it’s far too convenient that nobody else has ever stumbled on it before. The plot doesn’t explain any of these instances, and just throws them at you as given facts which don’t make sense.

The big reveal is underwhelming

Most of the film is devoted to the unleashing of the secret, final personality of Kevin. To illustrate that, he performs several superhuman feats of strength and agility. The issue is that it’s either done in shadow, or we see the results instead of the actual actions. It’s all too clear that these are camera tricks or stuntmen, because you never see Kevin’s face when those feats are displayed. You don’t believe in the power of this personality as a result.

Too many jump scares

For a horror film, jump scares are perfectly normal. They’re almost to be expected. But for a psychological horror film, which is what “Split” is, they feel like cheap tricks to mask the lack of actual psychological tension. There are just too many jump scares for this to feel like a clever manipulation of emotions.

 

“Split” is all right but not spectacular.

“Split” opens in cinemas:
– 19 January, 2017 (Singapore)
– 19 January, 2017 (Malaysia)
– 18 January, 2017 (Philippines)

This review was also published on Yahoo!.

Marcus Goh is a Singapore television scriptwriter. He’s also a Transformers enthusiast and avid pop culture scholar. He Tweets/Instagrams at Optimarcus and writes at marcusgohmarcusgoh.com

If you liked the article, follow me on Facebook and Twitter for more (presumably) good updates!

To get in touch with me, send an email!

Be the first to comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published.


*