Despite the fact that I have never played the game, I really wanted to see Until Dawn because the premise sounded intriguing. I convinced my nephew, who loves the game, to see it with me last night and we both hated it. Clover (Ella Rubin) is still traumatized by the disappearance of her sister Melanie (Maia Mitchell) a year ago so she and her friends Max (Michael Cimino), Nina (Odessa A'zion), Megan (Ji-young Yoo), and Abel (Belmont Cameli) travel to her last known location hoping for some closure. A severe thunderstorm forces them to stop at an abandoned house in Glore Valley and they notice some unsettling details. There is a giant hourglass that suddenly flips over, there is a guestbook signed by each visitor (including Melanie) thirteen times, and there is a bulletin board filled with posters of missing people (including Melanie). Nina signs the guestbook and then they are all brutally killed, one by one, by a mysterious figure in a mask. Everything resets and the five of them are back to where they started the previous night but the hourglass flips again, Nina's name appears in the guestbook a second time, and all of them appear on the bulletin board as missing people. Every night they are killed in a new and gruesome way (my favorite is when they explode after drinking the tap water) and then everything resets again. They eventually realize that they will be stuck in this time loop until they can survive the night. I thought this was really clever and I enjoyed the first act but then it becomes an incoherent mess. They eventually learn that those who are killed more than thirteen times become wendigos, supernatural beings who then torment the next visitors to the house, and that Melanie is now a wendigo. They also learn that Glore Valley was the site of a mining tragedy that killed over 11,000 people and that a psychologist named Dr. Hill (Peter Stormare, who is reprising his role from the game) was brought in to help the survivors overcome their trauma. Dr. Hill is now running an elaborate experiment to help Clover, who is apparently his patient, overcome the trauma of her sister's disappearance (they never learn how Dr. Hill is able to create and manipulate all of the supernatural elements in the house). There is absolutely no logic to the narrative and, in my opinion, the filmmakers should have chosen the supernatural story with the wendigos or the psychological story about trauma with Dr. Hill but not both. I had so many questions for my nephew afterwards but he said that the movie is nothing like the game (the game actually sounds really interesting). To add insult to injury, it looks terrible because it is so dark that you can't see what is happening and the dialogue is incredibly cringe-worthy (I lost track of how many times the characters say, "Holy shit"). This is definitely one to miss and my nephew recommends playing the game, instead.
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