A few years back, brother and sister Andy and Barbara Muschietti made a short horror film â essentially 3 minutes of two kids being chased through their house by a creature â and it got the attention of Guillermo del Toro who shepherded the duo into expanding the idea into a feature length film. The results are a far more clever premise then one might expect from watching the short, especially with so many horror films now falling into the same traps in trying to deliver the types of scares expected by less discerning horror fans.
The feature-length âMamaâ kicks off in particularly intriguing fashion, opening on an abandoned car by the side of the road, the radio informing us of an economic crash and a shooting at a financial firm. The carâs owner, a businessman played by Nikolaj Coster-Waldau (Jamie Lannister of âGame of Thronesâ), arrives home to pile his two young daughters into the car as they speed off across an icy roadway before the car skids off the road into the woods. The man leads the two girls into an abandoned cabin and we cut forward to five years later when the two girls are found, having gone completely feral. Their fatherâs twin brother Lucas (also played by Coster-Waldau) agrees to take them into his charge along with his punk rocker girlfriend Annabel (Jessica Chastain), but something comes back home with them, a being they refer to as âMama.â
Weâve all heard stories of kids found in the woods raised by animals and thatâs loosely the basis for how the Muschiettis expand their simplistic short film into something classier than the current wave of horror films, something more in line with other Del Toro productions. The filmâs prologue and Mamaâs origin creates something thatâs more than just a haunted house movie although physically, âMamaâ falls into the Japanese ghost territory of âThe Ring,â âThe Grudge,â et al. â long scraggly hair and movement as if every bone in her stick-thin body has been shattered and reassembled. This ever-present creature is brought to life by the efforts of creature performer Javier Botet (of âRECâ fame) thatâs enhanced with CG thatâs sometimes very effective and other times feels like itâs trying too hard.
Oftentimes, the credibility of any supernatural situation in a horror film is dependent on having actors who can make the rest of it feel real, and the Muschiettisâ good timing at getting a super-hot Oscar-nominated actress like Chastain pays off, as does casting Coster-Waldau, although heâs out of the equation for a good portion of the film. On the other hand, the young actress paying the younger daughter Lilly often steals scenes with her quirky behavior, crawling around on fours and playing with and sometimes eating bugs. Sheâs quite a find because many times sheâs even creepier than Mama while also bringing a welcome sense of humor to the film.
Unfortunately, the more times we see any iteration of any horror sub-genre the less likely itâs going to feel original and try as it may, âMamaâ sometimes suffers whenever it tries to set up scares weâve experienced in other movies. This is especially true when the psychiatrist more interested in the girls as a case study than for their own well-being heads towards being âMama fodder,â which is done in a way weâve seen in far too many other films. By using such an overused horror clichĂ© it takes from the originality the premise.
What keeps âMamaâ tipping over into the ever-filling pit of awful Hollywood horror movies is the talent both in front and behind the camera, particularly Muschietti who creates a lush film with solid production values with evocative production design and a mix of CG and practical FX that proves him to be a fine new horror talent.
We eventually learn Mamaâs backstory and why sheâs following these girls around, but that doesnât feel nearly as novel or clever as the set up. While some may not be into the ending, I felt it was where things returned to more original territory.
âMamaâ benefits from a better than average horror premise and some clever bits, and thatâs often enough to make up for the more obvious moments that foray into clichĂ© territory. Either way, the talented Muschiettis provide enough creepy fun so we can forgive some of the less original ideas and âMamaâ never leaves you feeling like your time is being wasted, which is so often the case these days.
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