6.8
Three high school students make an incredible discovery, leading to their developing uncanny powers beyond their understanding. As they learn to control their abilities and use them to their advantage, their lives start to spin out of control, and their darker sides begin to take over.
Dane DeHaan
Andrew Detmer
Alex Russell
Matt Garetty
Michael B. Jordan
Steve Montgomery
Michael Kelly
Richard Detmer
Ashley Grace
Casey Letter
Bo Petersen
Karen Detmer
Anna Wood
Monica
Rudi Malcolm
Wayne
Luke Tyler
Sean
Crystal-Donna Roberts
Samantha
Adrian Collins
Costly
Grant Powell
Howard
Armand Aucamp
Austin
Nicole Bailey
Cala
Lynita Crofford
Casey's Mom
Royston Stoffels
Pharmacist
Patrick John Walton
Park Ranger
Lance Elliot
Police Officer
Nadine Suliaman
School Flyer Girl
Pierre Malherbe
Police Detective
Joe Vaz
Michael Ernesto
Matthew Dylan Roberts
Ernesto's Neighbour
Allen Irwin
Redneck Trucker
Chelsea King
Girl in Window
Francois Coetzee
Thug #3
Hendrik Kotze
Priest
Matt Adler
Newscaster
Robert Clotworthy
Newscaster
Daisy Tormé
Karen Detmar (voice)
Chrystee Pharris
Samantha (voice)
Daniel Booko
Costly (voice)
Byron Thames
Howard (voice)
Matt Nolan
Austin (voice)
Charles L. Campbell
Pharmacist (voice)
Popeye Vogelsang
Park Ranger (voice)
Steve Kramer
Police Officer (voice)
Ashley Peldon
School Flyer Girl (voice)
Paul Pape
Priest (voice)
Jeff Fischer
Thug #3 (voice)
Director, Screenplay
Josh Trank
Screenplay, Story
Max Landis
August 11, 2013
Awkward loner Andrew (Dane DeHaan, soon to appear as Harry Osborn in The Amazing Spider-Man 2) is invited by his more affable cousin Matt (Alex Russell, Bait, Carrie) to go to a party, to help cheer him up. Andrew has problems at home; his mother is dying of cancer, the cost of her medication has become prohibitive, and his dad is an abusive drunk. Andrew brings with him the bulky old video camera he's been using of late to document... I dunno, the misery of his life I suppose. Anyway, once at the party Matt, mildly embarrassed by his cousin following him around with a camera, peels off away from Andrew to hang with some of the cooler kids, including the impossibly popular but genuinely decent Steve (Michael B. Jordan, The Wire, Friday Night Lights). The camera causes further problems for Andrew and he's unceremoniously ejected from the party. He's found outside by the aforementioned Steve, and invited to come with him and Matt to check out a weird hole in the ground in the woods nearby (elements of the party had spilled outside into the darkness, as these things do from time to time). Andrew, Matt and Steve venture down this hole, which turns out to be more of a tunnel, leading to... what is that? A space rock of some sort? Something mineral, and glowing, and a bit scary. Upon exiting the hole, the trio find that they possess mild levels of telekinesis, the ability to move objects with their minds. They also find that with practice, they can strengthen that ability. They soon graduate from levitating Lego bricks to flying through the air. Andrew proves to be particularly adept with this new "talent", and that proves to be problematic, because where Matt and Steve are content to limit their telekinetic use to mild pranks and perhaps flying somewhere interesting on holiday, Andrew's home life, general isolation and subsequent mood swings as a result of each cause him to want to embrace his power - and for him, it's grown into a potentially deadly power, now - in altogether different ways indeed.
With Chronicle, writer Max Landis (son of John "An American Werewolf in London" Landis) and director Josh Trank have taken some fairly tired areas (cinéma vérité, superhero origin tales) and made something decent and fresh with them, for comparatively little money (budget was $12m apparently, looks like five times that). It's not a perfect film - the first-person narrative's need to justify its camera angles leads to one or two bum notes despite the fairly ingenious device of having Andrew telekinetically "float" the camera around behind him; some of Andrew's worst rages during the second act - including one with devastating consequences - seem badly disproportionate to the infraction, disconnecting us from the character (though perhaps that's the idea); and the abusive father (Michael Kelly, Dawn of the Dead, Did You Hear About the Morgans?) seems unrealistically so. But these are things I thought about after having seen the movie. The movie's tone and pace, and the performances of the three newly-empowered young men particularly, carry the movie very well right to the brisk 78th minute end (minus the credits).
Recommended.
Status:
Released
Original Language:
English
Budget:
$15,000,000.00
Revenue:
$145,000,000.00