Rating: R
Starring:
Mark Wahlberg as Elliot Moore
Zooey Deschanel as Alma Moore
John Leguizamo as Julian
Ashlyn Sanchez as Jess
Betty Buckley as Mrs. Jones
Spencer Breslin as Josh
Robert Bailey Jr. as Jared
Jeremy Strong as Private Auster
Alan Ruck as Principal
M. Night Shyamalan as Joey
Directed by M. Night Shyamalan
Special Features:
Deleted Scenes
The Hard Cut
âI Hear You Whisperingâ
The Happening â Visions of The Happening â A Making Of
A Day for Night
Elements of a Scene
Gag Reel
Trailers
Other Info:
Widescreen (1.85:1)
Dolby Digital 5.1 Surround Sound
Spanish and French Languages
Spanish and French Subtitles
Running Time: 91 Minutes
Synopsis:
The following is from the official DVD description:
â From M. Night Shyamalan, the writer-director of âThe Sixth Senseâ and âSigns,â comes a gripping thriller about a family on the run from a mysterious and deadly phenomenon. Academy Award Nominee Mark Wahlberg (2006 Best Supporting Actor â âThe Departedâ) stars as Elliot Moore, an ordinary man trying to save his family from a terrifying, invisible killer. As Elliot begins to discover the true nature of what is lurking out there, it soon becomes clear that no one â and nowhere â is safe.â
âThe Happeningâ is rated R for violent and disturbing images.
Mini-Review:
This review will cover some spoilers from âThe Happening,â so skip it if you donât want to hear them.
I kind of get the same feeling from M. Night Shyamalan as I do from George Lucas. I eagerly anticipate every film they do and I unfortunately set my expectations too high. And when their film comes out and Iâm somewhat underwhelmed, I still eagerly get in line for their next film. I guess Iâm a glutton for punishment.
I missed âThe Happeningâ in theaters, but I heard enough about it to know that the premise sounded stupid â trees kill off the human race. The idea was so preposterous that, despite my love for Shyamalan and what he tries to do, I couldnât bear to watch it in the theater. Seeing other films with similar plots, like âThe Ruins,â didnât help matters. So this time I went into the movie with my expectations set very low. The final verdict? âThe Happeningâ has a LOT of problems, but it wasnât nearly as bad as I anticipated.
Iâm a sucker for apocalyptic or post-apocalyptic films. Thereâs something about stories of an everyman facing the end of the world and trying to survive that appeals to me. It doesnât even really matter how the world is ending as long as the survival part is good. So the fact that trees were killing people was forgivable. On some levels it worked pretty good because it was a colorless, odorless, inescapable killer that they were running from, and the way it killed people was pretty graphic. So from that point of view it was pretty good.
Unfortunately, âThe Happeningâ has problems everywhere else. First of all, itâs pretty much âSigns,â but with trees instead of aliens. In many ways it feels like a rehashed script. Second, every scene where it features just two people talking is agonizing to sit through⌠and thatâs a lot of the film. The dialogue is awkward and stiff, and the acting didnât help matters. Every single performance in this film is very wooden. Every scene between Wahlberg and Deschanel is painful to watch and the characters are not likable at all. The story also takes a wild left turn towards the end when the characters shelter with a crazy old woman living by herself in the woods. In some respects sheâs scarier than the tree threat, but she seems too bizarre to fit the rest of the film.
In the end, M. Night Shyamalan seems like heâs trying too hard to make a political or environmental statement. He tackles a cool subject like he always does, whether it be superheroes or ghosts or aliens or whatever, but the execution doesnât quite work out. âThe Happeningâ isnât his worst film in my opinion, but it is another misstep.
There are a fair number of bonus features on the DVD. There are four Deleted Scenes â Elliot and Alma Fight, Lion Attack, Music Recital, and Survivalist Porch. Thereâs not much noteworthy here, especially as it features more weak dialogue between Wahlberg and Deschanel. A scene where a student commits suicide at a musical recital comes across as quite stupid. âThe Hard Cutâ discussed the decision to make this R rated and what that entails. âI Hear You Whisperingâ covers the crazy woman, Mrs. Jones. âA Day for Nightâ follows Shyamalan through a typical day of filming while âVisions of The Happeningâ is your standard âmaking ofâ featurette. âElements of a Sceneâ covers the scene where the car crashes into the tree and itâs the highlight of the bonus features. It covers the animatics on the car crash scene, computers controlling the car and the camera, the suicide effects, and more. Itâs amazing how complex the filming of the scene was. Rounding things out are a Gag Reel and Trailers.