About The Movie:
The story revolves around divorced nurse Sarah (Elisabeth Shue) and
her teenage musician daughter Elissa (Lawrence), who are able to afford their…
well, dream house in an upscale rural town, since it borders a
seemingly-abandoned home where a girl named Carrie Anne murdered her parents
four years earlier. Sarah, however, is not pleased when she learns the property
is occupied by the family’s grown son Ryan (Max Thieriot) – a wounded
artistic soul who moved back home after his parents were killed – not to
mention that crazy Carrie Anne vanished without a trace.
Elissa eventually encounters Ryan (after running afoul
of Tyler (Nolan Gerard Funk), a high school stud who shows his true colors
when he drunkenly hits on Elissa) and the two artists are immediately taken
with one another, much to Sarah’s further chagrin. It’s not a spoiler to say
Ryan has been keeping a lid on some dark secrets, which threaten to harm Elissa
as she grows closer and closer to the mysterious boy-next-door.
HATES (as the trailers have dubbed it) shifts gears
moment-by-moment throughout the first two acts, before culminating with an
overly-repetitious third act that pours on the goofy horror/thriller cliches
like there’s no tomorrow.
Director Mark Tonderai doesn’t do the messy script any favors, as
he often seems more interested in experimenting with filmmaking techniques than
just telling the story. For example, there are a handful of sequences –
such as a brief dinner scene with Sarah and Elissa - shot with unsteady
handheld camerawork and hectic editing for no apparent reason. Similarly, there
are several beats where Tonderai employs visual trickery (slow-mo/fast-mo,
shifting lens focus, Dutch camera angles) in such a way that it calls
unnecessary attention to the style. To be fair, the prologue does
entertain as a piece of Hammer Horror.
Lawrence, is likable as Elissa, but the
character doesn’t have much of a personality. She is defined foremost through
her actions and feelings about others for the first two-thirds of the
film, before being reduced to the archetypal blonde-in-jeopardy during the last
half hour. Sarah, by comparison, has a bit more depth, and Shue does well
playing as someone who doesn’t have a clear handle on how to be a responsible
parent.
Ryan is often characterized through dialogue - Elissa
constantly refers to him as being quiet and sweet – but Thieriot fails to
communicate much more than what’s apparent on the surface. It’s a challenging
role, for sure, as the audience must be able to understand the turmoil bubbling
beneath Ryan’s nonthreatening exterior, but it cannot be so apparent that
Elissa seems completely oblivious for failing to notice. Thieriot, sadly, is
not up for the task – though, it does not help that his backstory ultimately
proves to be a half-cooked riff on… well, let’s just say that of a
more famous movie troubled man who may or may not live alone.
There are other people who get substantial screen time in House
at the End of the Street – like Allie MacDonald as Elissa’s new friend
Jillian, or Sarah’s would-be love interest Weaver (Gil Bellow) – but their
characters either prove to ultimately be superfluous to the story or serve
little purpose beyond moving the plot forward. That’s especially true for the
aforementioned Tyler, who mostly ends up being a plot device disguised as a
one-note jerk (a thankless role, for sure).
House at the End of the Street marks another
overly-ambitious effort to tackle multiple genres within the same
script. The end result is a film that borrows so liberally (and strangely) from
other movies that it could have been kind of fascinating to watch, but due to
confused direction, it’s ultimately kind of bland and
forgettable. Unless you really believe getting to see
Jennifer Lawrence in a tanktop for the majority of a film is worth the price of
admission, this one’s a rental at best.
Overall Grade:
B-
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