We saw The Turning in theaters and it’s got a ton of jumpscares and some great acting, but it is hamstrung by a script that never had a clue where it was going despite having a very clear and high-quality roadmap of the story that it was based upon - The Turn of the Screw.
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The Turning Trailer
https://youtu.be/rl33gU2APIs
The Turning Synopsis
While I
have never read the 1898 novella, The Turn of the Screw, by Henry James, I have
a feeling that it would not lend itself to the silver screen without a fair
amount of changes to the original story to make it more appealing for audiences
today. After having read some briefs and synopses of the novella, this movie
mimics it almost point for point.
We have a young teacher,
Kate (
Mackenzie Davis), who is hired on a palatial estate to teach and
govern a young child, Flora (
Brooklynn Prince). There is one other inhabitant on the grounds,
Mrs. Grose, who is the cook and maid.
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After a
short time, Flora’s teenage brother, Miles (
Finn Wolfhard) appears following being expelled from school. He
is quickly set up to be the antagonist of the story, seemingly very crude,
lude, and rapey.
The story
of Kate then unravels itself in shockingly slow, slow motion that is fraught
with the most exhausting bevy of jumpscares and twisty-turny bologna that I can
recall.
The ghost
of the previous teacher is hanging around, and the ghost of her killer, Miles
friend, Quint, is too.
The Turning Review
I would be
lying if I told you I understood what exactly there was to be scared of in this
movie. I believe The Turn of the Screw was originally a very well written
spooky ghost story. This movie is not adapted well to the big screen, probably
because it didn’t expand much on the original novella.
The acting
was actually pretty good, especially from both child actors, and the setting
was pretty effective as well. The script was the real issue here, as there is
just nothing around for it to hang its hat on and make it memorable or
interesting.
A better version of
roughly this same story, is found in 2018’s
The Little Stranger. The Little Stranger
understood ambiguity and how to use it. Is the main character losing his mind
or is this place haunted? I think ambiguity is what the source material is
about,