Release Date: 2nd June 2013
Director: James DeMonaco
Writer: James DeMonaco
Cast: Ethan Hawke - Lena Headey - Max Burkholder - Adelaide Kane - Tony Oller
Review
There is one simple reason for going to see ‘The Purge’: its
concept - which is an interesting one! In a future society, all forms of crime,
including murder, are legal for twelve hours once a year in a period called
‘The Purge’.
The film, starring Ethan Hawke, is made by the same
producers as those responsible for ‘Sinister’, which also featured Hawke. This
was a modern horror film that I highly regarded so I thought; why not give ‘The
Purge’ a chance?
Unfortunately, ‘The Purge’ disappointed. While the concept
of the film is interesting, its execution is lacking in a number of ways. The narrative follows a family who,
during the purge, choose to hide out in their house protected by a modern
advanced security system. When their youngest son allows what appears to be a
desperate homeless man into their home to shelter, the family end up being
taken hostage by a sinister group, intent on murdering the homeless victim.
Due to this, the film is set completely in one location; the
house. This means that the true extent of the interesting purge concept is not
really explored. Instead, the film focuses on horror and suspense which are executed
in a predictable manner. A horror film has to be frightening, and ‘The Purge’
is totally lacking in this aspect. While in parts it possesses an atmospheric
intensity, it does this using common horror techniques; a few select stingers,
some gory deaths and sinister shots of the protagonists in masks. It offers
nothing unique, leaving it predictable and…for lack of a better word, boring.
It projects no real sense of the intense fear or suspense which, after all, should
be the main focus of a horror film.
In addition, the film does also not deliver in terms of the
aesthetics. Ethan Hawke and Lena Headey give acceptable performances, realistic
enough for this type of film, but the director, James DeMonaco did not imbue
the work with anything particularly original.
‘The Purge’ – A simple, standard horror film that
unfortunately wastes an interesting concept.
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