Good heavens! The Shiznit hates M Night Shyamalan too!

Taken from quite funny cinema media commentary site The Shiznit.

http://www.theshiznit.co.uk/feature/why-i-hate-m-night-shyamalan.php

With the release of his latest movie Lady In The Water on DVD, our generation’s sub-Hitchcock is once again generating column inches. Critics have not been kind – “boring” say some, “career-threateningly catastrophic” says another – but I don’t need to see it to know that it’s a sickly sweet tale of morality about man and the supernatural, with a surprise shock ending. Again.

Let’s be honest, back in the day, Night was good at what he did – whether or not you foresaw the end of The Sixth Sense, you can’t deny it was an effective little thriller. Night managed to flog his one-trick pony the second time around with Unbreakable – moderately enjoyable despite its glacial pacing - but these days, it deserves to be taken out to the knackers yard. Shyamalan has painted himself into a corner in his career, and no amount of trick editing and CGI monsters can get him out of that. The ‘shock’ endings which Night appears to have trademarked have become downright lame: surely it makes sense to think that, if aliens can master spacecraft technology and travel brazillians of miles to planet Earth, they can also open Mel Gibson’s front door? “People of Earth! We have come to enslave you! Just as long as you don’t have any alien technology which allows you to become safely enclosed in an indoor environment! Or any water! Prepare to be invaded effortlessly!” Where’s your common sense, M. Night Charlatan? These are plot holes so big you can construct a series of luxury apartments in them.

Aside from the plot limitations of Night’s self-penned, self-obsessed work, his film-making style is equally bereft of spark. Plot points, imagery and hints are all rammed repeatedly home until the viewer is in no doubt that it means Something Important. And, at the end, when M. Night flashes his trademark Big Reveal, it’s the arrogant conceit of someone who enjoys the fact he’s using his directorial ability to hoodwink the punters. Us humble viewers, meanwhile, watch the movies and second guess the plots to such an extent that when the actual ‘twist’ is employed, it’s far less outlandish than what we had in mind. By the time I was halfway through The Village, I was expecting the monsters to be witchcraft-resurrected cannibals of dead villagers and the village itself to be the nightmarish hallucination of a man in a mental hospital undergoing a lobotomy inside a parallel universe where our actual ‘reality’ is controlled by aliens who use human beings as a battery source. Starring M. Night Shyamalan as the Alien God in human form.

That last point of course is entirely possible – like Hitchcock before him, Night insists on appearing in all of his movies, but where old Alfred lumbered harmlessly past in the background, Night’s ‘cameo’ roles have grown bigger and bigger. Case in point: Night has cast himself in Lady In The Water as a writer whose works will become more important than The Bible in 500 years time. Vain much? Future M. Night Shyamalan productions will presumably see the man himself playing the Son of God (only Night’s Jesus can fly, shoot lightning bolts out of his fingertips and goes out with Bryce Dallas Howard) and the sequel to Being John Malkovich, called… well, you get the idea.

The man’s ego far outstrips his slender talent. When The Village came out, he was responsible for a flatulent and ponderous documentary about his former life entitled ‘The Buried Secret Of M. Night Shyamalan’, which was in fact, nothing but invention. According to the doc, Night saw Something Dreadful When He Was Young That He May Or May Not Have Been Implicated In And Won’t Talk About But Never Actually Happened. The ‘documentary’ sees Night play hide-and-seek and bait-and-switch with a camera crew, all powered by his own gigantic sense of self-satisfaction (think a made-for-TV version of The Blair Witch Project and you’re not far off). In the end, Night comes across as some kind of post-modern joke: pretending to be a talented director to hoodwink Hollywood. All sleight of hand, you see: it certainly didn’t stop everyone from realising the Village sucked. It made me ashamed to wear yellow.

Around about the same time as the cinematic release of Lady In The Water, an accompanying book release named ‘The Man Who Heard Voices: Or How M. Night Shyamalan Risked His Career On A Fairytale’ hit shelves. Allegedly ghost-written by Night himself (some sections take the form of inner personal monologues which would obviously unbeknown to the ‘author’), it reveals that he is a frustrated visionary stifled by bean counters and egotists, or, conversely, an insufferably arrogant and unoriginal man who thinks his every word is Pure Genius and is in denial of the facts. Anyone can be a genius, but it doesn’t mean anyone IS a genius. One passage, in which Night is confronted by a young actress, is likened to “Moses before the burning bush.” Spare me.

So what is the truth about M. Night Shyamalan? Well Night, if you’re reading – and to be frank, sir, you seem like the kind of chap who Googles himself incessantly - you’ve boxed yourself in a corner, where the law of diminishing returns dictates that soon the only person appearing in, and watching your movies, will be yourself. If there is a twist ending to your tale, it’s probably not as good as the one we’ve got in mind.

I thought that was SO spot on - some of it so much so that I had to underline it.

He has another film making its way to the cinemas very soon.

Don’t say I didn’t warn you.

He should’ve stopped after The Sixth Sense. That way he would be the guy who made The Sixth Sense rather than that guy who made all of those shitty movies after The Sixth Sense.
Late,
grmpysmrf

Theres too much for me to read here but I didnt think that The Happening was horrible. It was a far step up from the Village which I personally think is the worst movie of all time

If you think The Village was the worst movie of all time then you haven’t seen Lady In The Water.

It’s excrutiating. Had to take my 12 year old nephew to see it and we both hated it. With a passion. The plot developments are so obvious and so clumsy. It’s as though he feels the need to bash every point he is trying to make over your head like a crowbar. Honestly, one of the the most sappy, heavy handed directors in history.

And YES, The Happening WAS that bad.

I started to watch LITW and I got bored about a half hour into it. I dont imagine how that could be worse than the village. Village pissed me off!

Shamalamawamawama is a lightweight, but I think most people realise that by now. However Signs was not meant to be logical or good. You were meant to go see it in the cinema and then get scared like sheep when you see glimpses of the monsters. But he failed at that too. I have yet to witness the glory of the Happening but I doubt it can top carmangary’s take. Death by Bin.

Shamalamawamawama is a lightweight, but I think most people realise that by now. However Signs was not meant to be logical or good. You were meant to go see it in the cinema and then get scared like sheep when you see glimpses of the monsters. But he failed at that too. I have yet to witness the glory of the Happening but I doubt it can top carmangary’s take. Death by Bin.

Didn’t he only direct signs? I didn’t know he wrote it too.
Late,
grmpysmrf

I have yet to witness the glory of the Happening.

Good plot, but its the worst acting job on Mark Wahlberg’s part. The female lead sucked too. And the thing that everyone was running from may also throw you off but it was still a step up from the village, which is saying alot

wow… ok… see i REALLY liked the Village. and i thought Signs was OK. but easily my favorite of his movies is the Village. Lady in the Water was not so good… haha… and the Happening was horrendous… but still i really liked the Village.

I thought The Village was ok too. Mind you, I’ve never seen the sixth sense, since someone ruined it for me before I had a chance to see it, so I never bothered…

HA!!

He’s gone and DONE IT AGAIN!!!

The Last Airbender

http://www.rottentomatoes.com/m/last_airbender/

8% on rottentomatoes!!!

20% on Metacritic.

Ebert gave it a 1 out of 10!!!

And yet people CONSISTENTLY go back to this hack and pay good money to watch his abominations and give the studio more incentive to throw money at this idiot to make films for them.

And I’ll bet even people on this forum will pay to see this:

“Err…gee well er…y’know I thought The Happening was kinda kewell and er…Signs that was a good one wit da aliens and all that and er…gee…er…the Last Airbender trailer did did look all reall kewell and gnarly and all…”

Wake up people!

http://screenrant.com/last-airbender-reviews-rob-66800/

<throws keyboard at wall>

And I’ll bet even people on this forum will pay to see this.

Not this Nigga! Even it the wife Netflixes it I’ll find something else to do.
Late,
grmpysmrf

Yeah, I knew you’d side with me on this one, grmpy.

They’re actually calling this the new Battlefield Earth.

They’re actually calling this the new Battlefield Earth.

HAHAHAHAHA! i hope nothing i ever do gets that tag…

But films that are that bad might be interesting to see. For example when the remake of the Wicker Man came out I was told it was the worst film ever made, thus I wanted to see it for that value alone. I wasn’t disappointed. See http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=e6i2WRreARo

However this Bender film is probably just boring. They should have cast Nic Cage in it.

And yet the guy’s films keep on making money hand over fist!! It’s amazing. Although, we do live in a universe where someone like Michael Bay can make a squillion so there you go.

The public gets what the public wants.

His films are atrocious - but they’ll make a buck in the first two weeks of release. Most will see it of out boredom. How often have you and a group of mates just rocked up to the cinema with no idea what to see and gone for whatever movie poster looked half decent.

And boys love special effects no matter how crap a film is. You make a film about a talking milk carton, load with effects and watch the money roll right in.

Although yes there are exceptions - sometimes even the general public aren’t THAT gullible.

Fuck, his films suck massive dick. Every single one of them. Anyone who sees The Last Airbender on the premise that “Well I thought it might have been decent” should immerse their head in a bucket of paint.

Chattin’ to a buddy of mine in the states last nite and he says that he took his daughter and her friend to see Last Airbender. On the way to the cinema, the dj on the radio starts talking about the film and the two girls get excited 'cos they’re fans of the anime and are looking forward to the bigscreen adaptation and all. Then the radio guy starts calling the film ‘possibly the worst big budget film of all time’. All these listeners start calling in and relating their experiences with seeing the film - which were universally negative to the extreme. My buddy looks at his daughter and her friend and they’ve gone pale, almost like they’ve been told that a loved family pet was to be put to sleep.

Says he almost turned the car around and went back home, such was the negative reaction from fans who were warning other listeners NOT to go and see the film.

But anyway, yeah, he ended up seeing it and says it was painful - literally. Says the 3d effects are all dark and murky and you have to strain really hard to make them out. His eyes were watering by the end of the film and he had a splitting headache.

The two girls hated it too - so there goes part of their childhood. Cardboard cutout characters, forced and over the top dialogue, loads of exposition, boring script…to me, from what was explained by my friend, it just sounded like typical Shyamalan.

I said to him "Dude…what the fuck did you expect???’

It’s not exactly controversial to call Shyamalan terrible.

BigShirtlessRon was at opening day for The Last Airbender, and gives it a C+. I’m glad I don’t wait for reviews and opinions to determine what I’ll see. Usually people’s reviews and opinions are shite.

Really not to familiar with the director - so that didn’t sway me one way or the other. Biggest issue for me with this movie were the 3 Dimensional effects.

Not one of the best PG movies ever; allright fare for the day. the two kids I took enjoyed it, with the 8 year old girl disappointed because her favorite character Toph wasn’t in this installment.

http://www.collegehumor.com/video:1940892