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Saturday, 21 January 2017

The Bye Bye Man Review

The Bye Bye Man (2017)

IMDb genre: Horror/Thriller
Director: Stacy Title
Writer: Jonathan Penner
Starring: Douglas Smith, Lucien Laviscount, Cressida Bonas

OK I promise I’m not a hipster but a lot of my movie opinions this month seem to be going against the grain and this one’s no exception; I feel it has been unfairly written off. Is it perfect? No, but I don’t think every movie has to be if it’s entertaining.
When the movie started with three two-dimensional teenagers moving into an obviously haunted house I thought I knew what I was in for and I’d definitely be rooting for the bad guy. However, I was pleasantly surprised that there was enough time in between scares spent on the characters themselves so they become worth watching not just to see them picked off. In a movie centred around personal fears we should get to see inside the characters’ heads and, at least with the main cast, this movie pulls that off.
There is the obvious comic relief character but she provides a welcome, if brief, respite in a film packed with some very effective jump scares. These provide the majority of the scares during the film rather than scares that stick with you, which is probably why it’s been criticised, but personally the more I thought about it afterwards the scarier it got to the point that I was scared to say the name for a couple of days!
Another highlight are the scenes with Leigh Whannell, not only does he act his scenes perfectly but there’s a clear choice to have these scenes in bright light and high colour which act as a fantastic contrast to the more human horror shown and the darkness of the majority of the main scenes.
As I said at the beginning though, it isn’t perfect so here come the negatives. The look of the Bye Bye Man is revealed too early in my opinion, a mistake made in many horror films, as it removes the majority of the suspense. It’s surprising then that so much else surrounding the villain himself is left unanswered; there’s obvious patterns to his ‘haunting’, for lack of a better word, but the reason behind them goes unexplained. There’s also a few others moments which feel like they’re building to a payoff that never arrives. This deliberate withholding of information plus the forced tacked-on ending feel like desperation for a sequel. I know this is common in horror movies but it doesn’t get any less annoying and maybe make sure the first one is really solid first please?

General Opinion: 

Sort the ending out and give me some answers but still well worth a watch.

Scare Factor:  

Reliant on jump scares but they’re done well and the idea is solid and stuck with me for a few days.

Gore: 

I’d have liked a little more gore but it is used effectively in a few scenes.

Clowns: 

There’s a couple of great comic relief scenes but it’s more focused on the horror.



The Bye Bye Man is currently in UK cinemas.

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