No, this isn't a movie about the reach around...unfortunately. Fortunately, it is a thriller that was unceremoniously and for some reason released in the summer, right "Indiana Jones and the Frolicking Space Helmets" and the new "Hulk" movie...I hope writer/director Bryan Bertino (not to be confused with Brian Boitano) doesn't have to deal with such blockbuster sandwich orgies again...that's too many meals in too little time.
Anyway, on to the review. The set up is very similar to "The Texas Chainsaw Massacre", in that the film claims this is "based on true events" and you also get the ending pretty much ruined right from the start. These two people you're about to spend the next hour and a half with...are doomed.
Unlike "The Blair Witch Project", they didn't film anything. They were too busy with other problems--see, the lead male, Jim, tried to propose to his girlfriend, played by Liv Tyler, and she didn't accept. Burn. And that's how we start this little fairy tale that is "The Strangers". It's not totally a breakup, but there are awkward moments shared by the two lead characters as they walk around Jim's parents house (with the assumption the parents either are dead or moved down to Florida and left him the house...or are away on a vacation to an old people's vacation spot, like a cruise). The reason it's awkward is because Jim decided to go the cliche route of proposing and litter the entire house with rose petals.
Ouch. But that's the kind of ouch the two of them would have preferred to what's ABOUT to happen to them.
After Jim calls his bud (Stinkfinger the Crow will LOVE who the friend is) and asks him to pick him up, take him home...even though it's 4 in the morning and they're in the middle of nowhere...he goes to eat some cream and tries to give the engagement ring to his girlfriend anyway, just saying "keep it anyway". This is a bit inexplicable, because typically you just return the ring and get the money back, right? And it's not entirely clear if they're still together, but they do try to make some lovin--
Then there's a KNOCK at the door. For the next hour, these two are thrown into probably one of the most intensely thrilling sequences I've seen in years. Bertino shows he is beyond amateur at directing--but he hasn't quite mastered screenwriting. The film dodges some questions character wise and plot wise that would have made these two characters even more endearing, and the scenario would have possibly been more credibly set up if we knew...WHY he wanted to leave HER at the house when it was technically HIS. Anyway, the ending is a bit anti-climactic, however it is a bit heartbreaking as well.
The best part of this film is exactly what you'd think would be horrible--that you know what's going to happen from the beginning. Yet I was still captivated, and still hoping that the inevitable wouldn't happen. Through all of the schemes they try to get out of their doomed situation, you're still rooting for them and wanting them to survive.
All in all, this is definitely a movie to take a date to, and give her a Stranger yourself when it's done...just don't wear a mask when you do it--she may put a knife in your face.

out of
