93% on Rotten Tomatoes (out of 234 reviews)
Runtime: 113 minutes
Directed by: Sam Raimi
Starring: Mostly it's Rachel McAdams and Dylan O'Brien
From: 20th Century Studios
I didn’t love the ending to the film; it was something I was sour about last night in the hours after viewing Send Help on the big screen. After a good night’s sleep, I still don’t love that they made this narrative decision that was “modern cinema” in a negative sense (that was my problem with it, not my preference to one of the two lead characters in what was mainly a two-hander) and it feels like needless 21st century BS inserted into a motion picture that otherwise felt retro-even the usage of a 20th Century Studios logo that mimicked the old 20th Century Fox logo used in the early 70’s.
However, my negative opinion on that decision has lessened. Much of it I did enjoy; as hinted at in the trailers, Rachel McAdams is an awkward nerd at an office job (who loves reading survivalist literature & watching Survivor) who has a new A-hole boss that is the spoiled inexperience son of the old boss, and he’s a bratty jerk. After a plane crash, only those two remain, stuck on a stunning tropical island in Thailand.
The key to the film: both Rachel McAdams and Dylan O’Brien were great in their roles; I even believed that a conventionally attractive woman like McAdams could be an awkward nerd. The relationship between the two & how it evolved during their time on the island, how both weren’t black-and-white caricatures, the bloody and/or visceral moments… I was enjoying the movie even if you don’t factor in the detail that this is an original idea instead of a reboot, remake, or sequel.
I was happy that a great veteran director was able to make an original R-rated genre movie, w/ an interesting score from Danny Elfman. The CG has been the target of complaints; valid, although there was only a time or two where it was distracting and that’s more a modern industry problem so that doesn’t impact my opinion of Send Help.
I am disappointed that the ending fell flat with me. The movie otherwise was well-constructed w/ nice hints early on of the final act. Despite my misgivings, I still found the movie to be pretty good & am glad it was seen at a Dolby Cinema.
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