In Night Swim, the always-welcome Wyatt Russell plays a father of two whose promising baseball career has been tragically cut short by an MS diagnosis. If that sounds like a surprisingly dark plot point for a movie thatâs ostensibly about a haunted swimming pool, well, strap in. Night Swim may have the might of James Wanâs Atomic Monster behind it but the next Malignant it most definitely is not. This is a woeful, inexplicably earnest horror movie that for some reason expects us to care more about the travails of a barely sketched, milquetoast white family than plunging us headfirst into the murky depths to have some real fun.
Frustratingly, Night Swim opens with an Asian family in the early â90s, the daughter succumbing to the pool in question while her terminally(?) ill brother watches on helplessly. At the risk of alerting the worst denizens of Twitter, are we really still doing this? Are we still making mainstream horror movies with all-white casts and patting ourselves on the back for giving some POC characters about five minutes of screen time? Thatâs not to say Russell, as the tortured, drawn Ray, and Oscar nominee Kerry Condon as his long-suffering wife, Eve, donât do a good job with the pitifully underwritten roles theyâve been given (the less said about their two children, who are essentially ciphers with one-line descriptors like âmean tweenâ and âfriendless loser,â the better).
Russell does a fine job communicating the hurt behind Rayâs eyes, his frustration at having to give up his dream while also inevitably becoming a drain on his family, who must rally together to help him even get around the house, always painfully clear. The actor fares less well when the script, which appears to have been written on the hop, requires him to experience a miraculous recovery thanks to the haunted pool, a wildly irresponsible and borderline offensive move that doesnât even make sense narratively. Co-screenwriters Bryce McGuire, who also directed, and Rod Blackhurst make a half-assed attempt to justify that the pool takes just as much as it gives but the explanation is so underdeveloped and comes so late in the story, that it confuses more than it shocks.
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The initial teaser trailer for Night Swim hinted that the evil entity was some kind of Creature from the Black Lagoon style foe but the reality, as has sadly become the norm with this kind of Friday night fareâwhich is cynically engineered purely with mass market appeal in mindâis far less exciting. Itâs yet another dull paranormal terror, complete with unconvincing CGI and frustratingly dumb decisions from the protagonists (seriously, the number of times someone leans precariously over the water in this movie before inevitably toppling in is laughable). Likewise, McGuireâs movie, adapted from his own 2014 short of the same name, doesnât play by its own rules, frequently flitting between the pool being the source of all danger and any water anywhere being controlled by the entity when it suits.
Even worse, the scares are derivative, uninspired, and telegraphed to the point of absolute madness, suggesting a lack of confidence in the unavoidably thin material. Little attempt is made to shoot the pool in a manner that would communicate a sense of encroaching danger, and the title is misleading considering several attacks take place in daylight. The scares are also highly repetitive, likely because there isnât a whole lot you can do with a haunted poolâespecially when youâre treating it with such deadly seriousness rather than the campness it rightfully deserves. Consider Shark Pool, a lively, tongue-in-cheek short in which, when a character suggests they just stop getting in the pool, someone else responds with absolute sincerity: âNo, itâs too hot!â Thereâs none of that energy here. This melodramatic sludge might as well be Midsommar given how seriously weâre expected to take it.
Treating this kind of material with the utmost sincerity isnât necessarily the wrong move, and it could even result in total hilarity as with the aforementioned Malignant, but McGuire and Blackhurst consistently fail to convince us that whatâs happening to the central family is worth investing in, to the extent that Rayâs failed baseball career is given considerably more airtime than anything else, whether itâs his daughterâs crush on a local jock or his wifeâs job, which is only briefly featured. Condon, a gifted actor, looks utterly lost throughout, not least because sheâs lumbered with the worried mom role, leaving Eve to react to whatâs happening around her rather than having any agency of her own. And, much like everybody else onscreen, her reactions also make little to no sense. Crucially, much of the action doesnât look as though itâs even believably happening in the pool itself due to the spatial dimensions and geography being off, further adding to the artifice of the whole endeavor.
Thereâs plenty of potential in the premise of an evil pool wreaking revenge on unsuspecting bathers, but Night Swim required either more nastiness or a campier tone to truly sell us on it. Sadly, this anodyne, leaden, bizarrely paced, and frequently incomprehensible slog of a movie isnât even fun in a so-bad-itâs-good kind of way.
WICKED RATING: 3/10
Director(s): Bryce McGuire
Writer(s): Bryce McGuire, Rod Blackhurst
Stars: Wyatt Russell, Kerry Condon, Amélie Hoeferle, Gavin Warren
Release date: January 5, 2024
Language: English
Run Time: 98 minutes