Zach Goodier
Daniel Radcliff departs his iconic role as Harry Potter to
portray a much darker character in a less child-friendly story. In this movie,
Radcliff portrays Ig Perrish, a young man who was madly in love with his
childhood friend, Merrin, until she was found dead in the forest, and the
entire town places the blame at the feet of Ig. Despite his attempts to argue
his innocence, everyone is convinced he is guilty. However, he wakes up after a
night of heavy drinking to find he has horns beginning to grow out of his head.
Is this a curse inflicted on him because he is actually guilty, or is there
more to this than meets the eye.
Well, there is more, much more. Ig’s horns allow him to
influence those around him that carry sinful hearts. For instance, when he
first notices the horns, he rushes to the doctor to see what they are, and in
the lobby a mother is ignoring her obnoxious screaming child. After the mother
sees the horns, she soon begins to freely discuss her hatred of her daughter,
and that she wants to just get up and leave her daughter forever. Behavior like
this plagues Ig, who discovers that his mother and father also carry dark
feelings towards him. However, Ig realizes that there is a strength in this
power, since anyone who carries darkness in their heart cannot hide it around
the horns. He soon uses this power to get to the heart of Merrin’s murder.
I wonder what the prognosis will be. |
The characters of Ig, Merrin, and some of the supporting
cast all really keep you interested all the way through. Motives of both
friends and foes are called into question, and the horns are an interesting
plot device that allows the viewer to see into the hearts of other characters
in an honest way that is normally impossible. Some of it is funny, but some of
it really shines a light on the hearts of everyday people, from priests to
parents to cops, you see that everyone has secrets to hide, and that the only
ones who can’t see Ig’s horns are those who don’t carry the weight of sin in
the hearts, and so they aren’t affected by them.
Moments like this are strangely satisfying, as Ig's horns force people to be honest about the dark desires they normally don't reveal. |
The story takes some interesting turns, and while the biggest
twist wasn’t all too surprising, there are a lot of neat little turns along the
way where Ig finds out dark truths about the people he thought he was close it.
The is a sort of message beneath it all, that even the people we’re close to
are sometimes strangers to us when we find out what they’re hiding.
In this movie, it's good to be bad, and I like that. |
Good:
-The horns’ power is an excellent driving force in the
narrative, and an excellent plot device that keeps the story moving and the
audience entertained.
-Ig, Merrin, and other characters feel realistic and
interesting.
-Lots of good twists and turns surrounding Ig and the people
he was close to.
Bad:
-Some of the special effects at the end felt a little silly.
-Villain’s repeated escapes felt frustrating due to repeated
stupidity on the part of several characters.
Scully Rating: 8.5 out of 10
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