Aneesh Chaganty

  • Run (2020)

    Run (2020)

    (Netflix Streaming, October 2021) I’ve been watching many underwhelming or mediocre thrillers lately, and just as I was thinking that I was becoming overly jaded, here comes Run to remind me of what works in a thriller. It does begin with a striking image, that of a newborn being revived by doctors. It doesn’t get any less troubling in the next few moments, as the showy direction portends much worse to come, but then we skip to years later, in an isolated rural house, where a bright young disabled homeschooled teenager is waiting for her college admission letters and wondering how she’ll fare once out of her comfortable environment. Alas, this is when various incidents and odd bits of information have her questioning what her mother is doing to prevent her from ever leaving. The twist in store for us is not that original (and poses vexing questions about some of what we see early in the film), but the way of getting there is a thrill ride. It starts with a likable protagonist: Kiera Allen is a revelation as the protagonist, whose bright and likable nature gets stronger in each scene. There’s obviously a mystery running thought Run, as our protagonist, once kept carefully ignorant in her domestic bubble, starts discovering more and more unsettling revelations about the pills she gets and the circumstances of her early life. There’s a bravura sequence in which she escapes to get an answer from a pharmacy that cleverly shows the balance of suspense, pacing and occasional dark humour that the film manages to create. Writer-director Aneesh Chaganty finds a good balance between showy and straightforward direction and has fun playing with his own script (co-written by Sev Ohanian, who co-wrote another recent hit with Searching). Sarah Paulson is suitably kind and menacing in the role of the mother. It all ends with a very nice final sequence, further cementing the film’s success as a thriller. A modest but confident thriller, Run is a nice surprise even for jaded viewers.

  • Searching (2018)

    Searching (2018)

    (On Cable TV, March 2019) Technology changes movies, specifically changes the grammar of movies, and after more than a decade of staring at computer screens, it makes sense to see the rise of a sub-genre of films executed as if from a computer screen from start to finish. Searching comes hot on the heels of films such as Open Windows and Unfriended (the last of which shares producer Timur Bekmambetov), but it manages to feel like something more than a cinematic experiment. It’s clearly more confident in what it can do, and so the execution incorporates different computers screens (to show the passage of time), zooms, flashbacks and multimedia variance. Even from a more nuts-and-bolts narrative perspective, it’s significantly stronger in terms of characterization, suspense, plot details and Easter eggs (I caught parts of the alien-invasion subplot, but not all of it). John Cho is quite good as a grieving father doing all he can to find his missing daughter—the first two thirds of the film are more about style than substance, but the last act eventually gets to the point of delivering some emotional payoffs as well. Searching is compelling viewing, paced for the Internet era and clearly eliding details that are taken for granted by modern audiences. (I’m having fun imagining what an average 1950s viewer would make of the film.)  Some of the new film grammar invented by writer-director Aneesh Chaganty is quite clever, and so is the way that it makes use of the big Internet structures that we now consider part of our lives. I have no clue how well this is going to age, but I suspect that at the very least it’s going to be a fascinating time capsule of circa-2018 Internet use. (Complete with concern trolling, social media hypocrisy and anonymous attacks.)  I liked Searching quite a bit, and as more than just a showpiece of a different kind of way to tell a story—although that counts for it as well.