The Guest | Little White Lies

The Guest

04 Sep 2014 / Released: 05 Sep 2014

Words by David Jenkins

Directed by Adam Wingard

Starring Dan Stevens, Maika Monroe, and Sheila Kelley

A man in a black jacket holding a gun in a red-lit room.
A man in a black jacket holding a gun in a red-lit room.
4

Anticipation.

Adam Wingard’s previous seemed to prove he was more than just a genre journeyman.

2

Enjoyment.

A set-up rich with metaphorical potential is squandered.

2

In Retrospect.

No reasons offered to take another bite of this bitter cherry.

Dan Stevens is a strange vis­i­tor who ends up being a dull vis­i­tor in Adam Wingard’s under­whelm­ing genre mash-up.

If at all inclined to catch direc­tor Adam Wingard’s fol­low-up to his mild­ly revi­sion­ist 2011 hor­ror yarn, You’re Next, you’d do well to fold up this mag­a­zine and tuck it away for lat­er read­ing, as The Guest is one of those movies whose entire plot has, what the kids are call­ing, spoil­er poten­tial”. Yet, if you’re nam­ing your film The Guest, you’re basi­cal­ly, if not ful­ly dis­clos­ing, then cer­tain­ly wail­ing through a bull-horn, the fact that there will be more than meets the eye to this epony­mous visitor.

Down­ton Abbey alum­nus Dan Stevens uses this oppor­tu­ni­ty to prove that he’s more than a fan­cy-boy fop, adopt­ing a con­vinc­ing South­ern Amer­i­can drawl and going full Gosling for his lead role as David, a recent­ly-dis­charged Marine who has opt­ed to vis­it the des­o­late fam­i­ly of a broth­er-in-arms who bit the bul­let on the field of com­bat. Though father, moth­er, broth­er and sis­ter have nev­er heard of David, his Step­fordesque politesse and ultra-diplo­mat­ic man­ner — and not to men­tion he pos­sess­es the so-what buff­ness of an off-duty Chip­pen­dale — quick­ly earn him a place in the fam­i­ly nest. In the minds of the audi­ence, though, it couldn’t be more fla­grant­ly overt that he’s an odi­ous turd with an ulte­ri­or motive.

Alas, Pasolini’s Theroem this ain’t, as Wingard appears to want noth­ing more from his film than a cou­ple of pass­able jump-scares and to have Stevens admin­is­ter a bunch of evil glances towards his co-stars. The action is hap­haz­ard­ly for­mu­lat­ed so that for the first half of the film you’re sim­ply wait­ing for the ball to drop, and when it does, it tran­spires that Wingard has dis­pensed with the metaphors entire­ly to give him­self a free pass to orches­trate an arm-flail­ing glit­ter-bomb finale.

The essen­tial prob­lem with the film is that, on one hand, Wingard and screen­writer Simon Bar­rett are attempt­ing to cul­ti­vate a mys­tery in order to main­tain inter­est in the nar­ra­tive, yet on the oth­er, they con­gest the screen with thin char­ac­ters whose grim fate is vir­tu­al­ly a fait accom­pli from the first moment we set eyes upon them.

Its depic­tion of a work­ing class fam­i­ly in the throws of depres­sion could bare­ly be more obvi­ous, from the young son being bul­lied at school, to the mil­i­tarist, over­bear­ing and booze-depen­dent patri­arch and his sad-eyed wife who, in the end, has very lit­tle to do oth­er than be sad-eyed. The daugh­ter, Anna, played by Mai­ka Mon­roe, is the film’s sole point of emo­tion­al entry, though by the final chap­ters, even she is reduced to a pum­melled rag-doll with the stock task of run­ning, cow­er­ing and screaming.

Maybe the The Guest is intend­ed as a hearty explo­ration of the grief that comes from los­ing a loved-one in war and the ghosts which inevitably emanate from the fall-out? Or it could be a sly satire on small­town, work­ing-class Amer­i­ca and its col­lec­tive, unspo­ken yen for vio­lence and con­flict? Or maybe a com­men­tary on exper­i­men­tal mil­i­tary tech­nol­o­gy and the way it is secret­ly deployed in pub­lic? It would be nice to think that such depths were inten­tion­al, but Wingard’s case for The Guest being a hol­low, schemat­ic genre flick is far too compelling.

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