Watch horror Movies for free with Amazon Prime

Clown

Clown the movie
2014
0
Director: 
Jon Watts

SYNOPSIS: 

The plot, such as it is, hinges on a clown costume which principal protagonist Kent (Andy Powers) finds in one of the houses his real estate company is handling. As the entertainer booked for his son Jack's birthday party has just cancelled, he puts it on in order to fill in and save the day. Unfortunately, when he tries to take it off again, it won't budge. Enter Peter Stormare as an old man who knows the costume's terrible secret and who warns that, unless he submits to decapitation, Kent will soon find himself possessed by a demon with a hunger for the flesh of children. As the tale progresses, Kent's pregnant wife (Laura Allen) strives to find a way to save him and to keep Jack out of the demon's reach.

REVIEW: 

Hating clowns is pretty much a religious observance in Western culture. No one really needs to explain, ‘I hate clowns’, and no one ever seems to be indifferent to them, let alone like the things, save for women of a certain age who are into naff figurines; it’s weird, though, that so many people have an opinion on something they haven’t ever seen first-hand in their original environment. I don’t know many people who’ve even been to the circus or ever had clowns turn up to entertain them at parties, or if they have, it’s certainly not frequent and/or traumatic enough to create a genuine aversion to them. In fact, most folk seem to encounter clowns primarily through the medium of horror movies, in which case, it’s like saying you have a phobia of masked killers. Of course you fucking do.

Regardless, ‘coulrophobia’ is an accepted Thing, everyone seems to have it, and it forms the basis of a lot of films like Clown (2014), which itself is based on a mock trailer. The original filmmakers, Jon Watts and Christopher D. Ford, mocked up this trailer and added that it was ‘from master of horror Eli Roth'; it wasn’t, at the time, but Roth saw it and liked the idea, getting on board as a producer to make the film into a real feature, directed by Watts. The end result is what we have here.

clownFollowing in the footsteps of the faux trailer, things begin to happen when someone double-books a clown meant to entertain at young Jack’s birthday party. Mom telephones dad, Kent, and asks him to step in. Kent works in real estate and, as cinematic luck would have it, he finds a clown outfit in a mysterious and dusty old chest in the basement of a house newly on his books. Isn’t it always the way? He puts it on, heads home and does rather a good job of entertaining the nippers. Thing is, when he tries, he can’t take the suit back off. And suddenly that’s not a wig anymore – that’s his own, curly, rainbow-coloured hair! The clown seems to be taking him over somehow, and he needs to find out as much as he can about this mysterious outfit before it’s too late and bad things happen…

The back story of this film is quite interesting, however – altogether – the back story turns out to be more engaging than the feature itself. As noble as the sentiment behind all of this is, Clown is simply better as a fake trailer. It was conceived as a trailer, and trailer it should have remained; there simply isn’t enough plot here to go round. Even a short film would have been the better option. Sure, the fake ‘clown origins’ yarn is pretty funny, and some of the visual gags work (though where they do, like the rainbow-coloured blood spray, they’re repeated over and over) but all in all this film is agonisingly slow. Not having written enough story, Watts seems to have deliberately directed this film in slow-mo; for example, one sequence with a child crawling through a tunnel seemed to go on forever, and the upshot of it all plain doesn’t reward the patience it requires of the audience.

It’s all a bit awry in terms of what it wants to do, too, as well as taking aeons to get there. Does it want to play for laughs? Well, sort of, in places, but then it’s padded out with reams of wan, po-faced seriousness, all muted colours and gloom, which rests uncomfortably with the central premise of the film – i.e. a demonic clown running amok. Upping the ante and playing it for obscene laughs would seem to have been the best way to handle this material, even if it meant going in a slightly different direction to the original trailer (though even that has a lot more colour and camp to it than the end feature). Things aren’t helped by the writing for mom Meg (Laura Allen) who commands most of the camera time, more than our clown does for sure, but she genuinely seems confused by what’s going on and has one facial expression to communicate this. Laura Allen has a solid pedigree as an actress, though not so much as a horror actress, and perhaps she wasn’t quite at her best here, though I’ll admit my eyes begin to roll as soon as we’re faced with Obligatory Pregnant Woman in Peril in a film.

Ultimately, if you’re a card-carrying clown phobic then you’ll probably find sufficient material here to pretend to cower from, even though there’s a surprising lack of gore – some weak CGI moments notwithstanding – considering the Roth involvement (though rest easy – a chair with manacles does feature.) It’s not a terrible idea, this, but if your film is called Clown then you expect more of the clown and less of the dull human drama. Neither frightening nor funny, here’s another lesson to prove that fake trailers are often fine just as they are.

SIMILAR MOVIES REVIEWS

OTHER MOVIES REVIEWS

Ichi The Killer (Koroshiya 1)

Ichi The Killer (Koroshiya 1)

2001

Ichi The Killer (Koroshiya 1) is director by Takeshi Miike. I would say it is Miike’s best film, but he has such an extensive and varied catalogue it is hard to even see all his films let alone really compare them: they range from zombie musicals (Happiness of the Katakuris) to spaghetti westerns based on Shakespeare’s Henry VI (Sukiyaki Western Django). Miike is one of the world’s most prolific directors, making about 3 films every year for the past two decades and they are rarely in the same genre twice, although he does have a love stories involving the Yakuza (... Read More

Noroi: The Curse

Noroi: The Curse

2005

It’s true that when it’s bad, it’s really bad, but there are a few gems out there that make it all worthwhile. The other day I managed to see what might be the most complex one yet, one that doesn’t sacrifice story for the sake of cheap shocks. This film, my friends, is Noroi the Curse, from director Kôji Shiraishi. Bearing more resemblance to something like Brian De Palma’s Redacted* than Paranormal Activity, the film is structured as a mockumentary by the fictional paranormal investigator/journalist Masafumi Kobayashi.... Read More

Annabelle: Creation review

Annabelle: Creation

2017

"Annabelle: Creation" falls in accordance with the advanced awfulness wave. It's the fourth film in "The Conjuring" serie — and the second spinoff to focus on Annabelle, a freaky-looking doll that resembles the Victorian-period cousin of "Child's Play's" Chucky — and it has every one of the components of a contemporary frightfulness hit, including the frightening doll, the spooky (or spooked out) kids and the house that is too huge not to be alarming during the evening.  On the off chance that exclusive it were, you know, scarier. "Annabelle: Creation" has yells and... Read More

Preservation - review

Preservation

2014

So this is somewhat of a spoiler, however the "motif" of this motion picture is the killers are young people - however I'm certain you likely made sense of that when you read they ride bikes. That all by itself is insufficient to destroy this film. What is, in any case, is their appearing invulnerability (when it's helpful, obviously). The previously mentioned Sean is a previous military veteran who, at a certain point, hits one of the children in the head with the handle of his rifle most likely five or six times. Not exclusively does the executioner get up as though... Read More

The Bye Bye Man

The Bye Bye Man

2017

The heroes Elliot (Douglas Smith), Sasha (Cressida Bonas) and John (Lucien Laviscount) are generally wooden in their acting, however they can most likely be excused for working with a dull plot and dreary discourse. They're additionally dominatingly TV performers, and not especially refined ones at that, so to seek after them to convey the motion picture is excessive.  Indeed, even the working of the Bye Man's legend does nothing for the watcher, since the figure of speech has been played out by such a large number of various films that have likewise improved (... Read More