Synopsis
Under Jeff Wadlow's direction, 'Truth Or Dare' (2018) firmly positions itself within the commercially potent, often formulaic, Blumhouse horror canon, targeting a younger demographic. The film swiftly establishes its supernatural premise: a seemingly innocuous 'Truth Or Dare' game twisted into a demonic plight. However, its execution often prioritizes cheap jump scares over genuine psychological depth or character exploration.
Lucy Hale, as Olivia, anchors the ensemble with a performance that conveys a believable sense of escalating dread, even when the script struggles to provide her character with profound moral quandaries beyond surface-level choices. Tyler Posey and Violett Beane contribute to the dynamic, though their roles largely adhere to genre archetypes, serving the plot's momentum rather than offering nuanced character development. Cinematically, Wadlow employs a visual language designed for immediate impact, utilizing distorted smiles and rapid cuts to punctuate moments of supernatural intervention. Yet, this approach, coupled with a somewhat generic sound design, rarely transcends the conventional, leaving the film feeling more like a competency exercise in genre tropes than an innovative entry. The film's thematic exploration, concerning the corrosive nature of lies and the weight of consequence, feels thinly veiled beneath its horror mechanics, ultimately limiting its resonance beyond superficial thrills. Its place in the genre is that of a serviceable, if unmemorable, 'cursed game' entry.
Trải nghiệm ngay bản Truth Or Dare chuẩn Netflix mới được bổ sung.
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