A masked killer stalking a small group of survivors, as they run
through the halls of what appears to be an abandoned ghost ship, may
sound like elements to your standard slasher flick, which to be fair it
does, but you are in for a big surprise when you sit down to watch
writer/director Christopher Smith’s horror/mystery film
Triangle
because it is far from standard. Now the best way to view a movie like
this would be to go in blind, with as little foreknowledge as possible,
and if that is the way you’d like to see
Triangle than
stop reading now and go rent or stream it, but for the sake of this
review I will be getting into “some” spoilers but will avoid the big
ones.
The movie’s central character is Jess (
Melissa George),
a waitress and single mother who has come to the veritable breaking
point due to the stress of bringing up her autistic son Tommy (
Joshua McIvor),
and on this sunny Saturday afternoon she plans to go on a sailboat ride
with a group of people in the hopes of regaining a bit of her sanity.
When she arrives at the dock she seems very frazzled and it's there that
good looking Victor (
Liam Hemsworth) comments
“I don’t think so” when boat owner Greg (
Michael Dorman) asks her
“Are you okay?” Also part of this nautical outing is married couple Sally (
Rachael Carpani) and Downey (
Henry Nixon) and their friend Heather (
Emma Lung),
who they hope to hook up with Greg. Sally seems rather keen to set Greg
up with a sensible stable woman and not a waitress with an autistic
son, but before there is any chance of romance on the high seas the wind
suddenly dies and a nasty storm appears on the horizon.
At this point I would have started my engine and headed home.
Instead
of engaging his boat’s engine, and getting the hell out of there, Greg
calls into the Coast Guard to get weather information. The radio is full
of static and the response from the Coast Guard is cut-off by the voice
of a woman crying out,
“Please help me, she killed them, they are all dead.”
Greg is unable to get anymore from the radio but they soon have more to
worry about than cryptic radio messages as soon the storm is upon them
in full force, and their yacht is soon capsized by a huge wave. Our cast
survive the storm, all that is but poor Heather who we never see again,
and they find themselves stranded on the hull of the overturned boat in
the middle of the ocean. Things certainly look bleak for our intrepid
heroes. Well that is until they see an ocean liner approaching in the
distance and when it draws alongside their capsized boat they quickly
clamor aboard, that is after spotting a lone figure up on the ship’s
deck that strangely failed to respond to their hails. It's at this
point that things begin to look a lot worse than bleak as their
situation starts to turn towards the bizarre and the terrifying. The
ship seems strangely abandoned as our group searches up and down the
hallways, with not a soul in sight, and though Jess mentions she is
suffering from a serious case of déjà vu, insisting that she has been
here before, the group decide to ignore her ramblings and follow the
standard horror film rule of splitting up so they can be killed off more
easily.
It’s not Camp Crystal Lake but I still wouldn’t want to wander around alone on that thing.
Our
first real clue that something is decidedly off, well aside from the
fact that there are no passengers or crewmembers to be found, was that
of Jess discovering her own keys sitting on the floor of one of the
ship’s corridors. Sally posits that they may have been dropped by the
missing Heather, who somehow could have survived the storm and made it
on board, but as this makes no fucking sense this mystery is ignored.
Jess spots a figure and Victor rushes off to chase it down, then Jess
and Greg decide to continue their search of the ship while Sally and
Downey chill out in the ship’s dining room; a room that is strangely set
up for a banquet consisting of more fresh food than you’d expect to
find on a ghost ship. Jess and Greg checkout one of the staterooms and
discover a message written in blood on a bathroom mirror that states,
“Go to the theater.”
This is not a ringing endorsement for the arts.
Greg
starts to act like a jerk, minimalizing Jess’s fears and feelings, and
so she runs off on her own because that is a good idea. When she
arrives back at the dining room she find Sally and Downey missing and
all the food now rotted, but before she has a chance to wonder what’s
going on Victor enters, all covered in blood, and he tries to kill her.
She fights him off by aggravating a small bloody hole in the back of
his head, this ends up killing him, she then flees to the theater where
she encounters a freaked out Sally and Downey who are standing over a
dead Greg. They tell Jess that Greg said she (Jess) shot him and before
Jess has a chance to defend herself against this accusation a figure
wearing a burlap mask opens fire from a balcony above. The shooter kills
both Sally and Downey and then proceeds to stalk Jess through the ship
until they have a showdown on the outside deck where Jess disarms the
assailant while screaming,
“Who are you?” but all she gets as a response is the masked figure mumbling
"You have to kill them, it's the only way to get home" before falling overboard.
This kind of thing would never happen to Jason or Michael Myers.
Unfortunately
her nightmare is far from over as barely a moment after the masked
killer went overboard Jess hears yelling coming up from the ocean, and
when she looks over the side she sees the overturned yacht with Greg,
Sally, Downey and herself standing on it. This "new" group board the
ocean liner while Jess, the survivor from the first group, becomes the
unseen watcher that the original group were tracking. She is the one who
dropped the keys for her earlier self to find, and she was the one to
encounter Victor and is responsible for his bloody appearance as she
accidentally slams his head onto a small wall hook, which is what set
him off on his bloody revenge attempt that we saw earlier. Jess flees
into the bowels of the ship where she finds a locker full of dozens of
duplicates of the shooter's outfit, the shotgun, and numerous copies of a
note in her handwriting stating
“If they board kill them all.”
She also drops her locket down a grate onto a pile of what appear to be
dozens of exact duplicates of said locket. This is what really cements
the fact that the loop she is currently stuck in may have been going on
for quite some time, but it is when Jess runs into another version of
herself that things really start to go crazy.
“You are not me.”
I will go no further with spoilers as this a very dark and twisted in the vein of a good
Twilight Zone
episode, and I hope I’ve said enough to at least wet your appetite
without ruining the experience. Christopher Smith has constructed a
very labyrinthine tale that though it deals with time loops is not
really a science fiction story as it fits more into the genre of dark
fantasy/horror, which kind of absolves some of the film's
inconsistencies in its time loop element as those very same
inconsistencies could be elements showing the loops more sinister
nature.
Triangle is also one of those films that can really benefit from a second viewing in the same vein that
The Sixth Sense and
The Prestige
are just as good on repeated viewings; the movie works just as well
when you know where the story is going because this allows you to pick
up on things you missed the first time around.
Triangle
is a very atmospheric piece, and the director really knows how to keep
the audience at the edge of their seat here, but without the stellar
performance provided by Melissa George it probably wouldn’t be nearly as
compelling. I don’t think there has ever been a “Final Girl” as
captivating nor as complicated as the one found here and much of that is
due to Melissa’s performance. I can’t recommend this film enough.
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