The Lazarus Effect was written by Luke Dawson and Jeremy Slater, and directed by David Gelb.
Dawson
wrote the screenplay to 2008's Shutter, while Slater wrote the upcoming
horrible looking Fantastic 4 (or Fant 4 Stic, as the trailer suggests) reboot. Well, at least their work's
consistent. Gelb previously directed a number of documentaries. Perhaps
he should have stuck with that format.
Think
Flatliners meets Event Horizon and you'll have a pretty good idea what this film is like. Scientists work on a project to bring the dead
back to life, and after being forced to use it on one of their own, she
comes back... changed.
The Lazarus Effect can't seem to settle on a tone or even a direction. The story meanders down multiple paths, most of which turn out to be dead ends, leaving us frustrated with abandoned concepts and unanswered questions.
The
film raises issues about science vs. religion, death and the afterlife
that are actually quite interesting, but then totally ignores them as
devolves into a typical watered-down PG-13 slasher film (there's even a Final Girl!). If the writers
and director had shown even slight interest in examining the topics they
bring up, they might have actually had a decent movie on their hands.
The
Lazarus Effect was actually filmed back in 2013, but wasn't released until
February 2015. As regular readers of my blog know, this is never a good
sign, and you should avoid such delayed movies at all costs.
Lastly, Donald Glover stars in the film as Niko. I sure hope he didn't leave Community just so he could make movies like this one.
SPOILERS, ALTHOUGH IF YOU'VE EVER SEEN EVEN ONE HORROR FILM, YOU'LL GUESS EVERY PLOT POINT IN THIS ONE.
The Plot:
Two
university research scientists, Frank (played by Mark Duplass) and his
fiancee Zoe (Olivia Wilde), are working on a serum to help coma victims.
They're shocked when they discover the substance, codenamed Lazarus,
can actually bring the recently dead back to life. Coma, resurrection,
eh, it's all the same thing.
Plot point! Zoe has nightmares about an apartment fire she experienced as a child, in which she witnessed her neighbors as they burned alive. Remember that, as it becomes important later on.
Frank
& Zoe, along with their assistants Clay (played by Evan Peters, of
X-Men: Days Of Future Past fame), Niko (played by Donald Glover, whose
presence in this film makes me wish I was watching Community instead)
and videographer Eva, test the Lazarus serum on a euthanized dog named Rocky. The
dog actually comes back to life, but there are unintended side effects.
Its cataracts completely disappear, and its brain is furiously forming
new and complex synapses.
When
the university dean gets wind of their ethically dubious experiments,
she shuts them down. Shortly afterward all their research is confiscated
by a large, evil drug corporation. Frank and Zoe decide to sneak back
into the lab and recreate the experiment to prove they came up with the
Lazarus drug.
During
the secret experiment, Zoe is electrocuted in the silliest way
possible. A desperate Frank injects her with the Lazarus serum, and
lo and behold she's resurrected. However all is not right with Zoe. She claims she
visited Hell while she was dead, and begins developing telepathy and
telekinesis, which one naturally does after coming back to life.
Zoe's
condition gradually worsens as she becomes aggressive and murderous
for no apparent reason. She begins picking off the cast one by one, even killing
her fiance Frank. She saves Eva the Final Girl for last, somehow
transporting her into a dream-like (I guess) version of her apartment
fire nightmare. Told you that would be important later!
While there, Eva realizes that Zoe actually started the
apartment fire when she was a child, which is presumably why she went to
Hell. Eva manages to inject Zoe with a deadly chemical, but it turns
out it was all in her mind, and Zoe kills her.
Zoe
then injects the rest of the Lazarus serum into her head. She then injects Frank
with her serum-infused blood, resurrecting him. We then see the rest of
her victims laid out, implying she's creating an army of resurrectees
for some reason.
But we never find out what happened to Rocky the dog. Maybe he'll be back in the sequel.
Thoughts:
• If nothing else, the film clocks in at a brisk eighty three minutes, so it won't torture you for too awfully long.
• This film must set some kind of record for jump scares. Practically
every scene features a character unexpectedly grabbing someone by the
shoulder, or lunging in from behind, or even popping up wearing a pig
mask (!). It's as if the director realized the story wasn't the least
bit frightening, so he ramped up the quota of jump scares in a flailing
effort to shock the audience somehow.
•
You know, now that I think about it, people "die" on the operating table and are brought back to life
all the time. So far I don't think any of them have developed psychic
powers or brought pieces of Hell back with them.
• After
Rocky the dog's brought back to life, he seems mopey and unresponsive. Zoe
wonders if they did the right thing by bringing him back, asking "What
if we ripped him out of doggy heaven? What if he didn't want to come back?"
Later
Zoe claims she went to Hell after she died, and even though she was
only gone a few minutes, it felt like years to her. She's also pissed that
even though she's spent her adult life atoning for the mistake she made
as a child (setting her apartment building on fire), she was still
condemned to Hell.
Those are all interesting ideas, and I'd eagerly see a film about any one of them. Why bring up notions like this and then completely avoid them?
•
The always great Ray Wise puts in half a day's work as Mr. Wallace, the
head of the "evil" drug corporation that confiscates the heroes' research
materials. He's in the movie for all of two minutes. If that. Pity they
didn't utilize him more.
•
During their second dog-resurrecting experiment, Zoe pulls the switch
on the circuit box and is accidentally electrocuted, all because she
forgot to take off her engagement ring. Jesus Christ! Is that a real
thing? Can you really be electrocuted just by pulling a switch on a
such a power box? Maybe they ought to think about some insulation.
•
When Zoe's killed, Frank valiantly tries to revive her with standard
methods, by injecting adrenalin into her heart. Gasp! For one brief
shining moment, I actually thought we were finally going to see the
proper, realistic use of a defibrillator in a movie. Alas, my hopes were
dashed. When the adrenalin doesn't work, they use the defibrillator in
the usual erroneous Hollywood way.
Once
more with feeling: A defib unit is not like jumper cables for your
heart! It actually stops the heart, not starts it!
When the heart stops
beating, it's called asystole, which as you can imagine is a bad thing.
The doctor then injects adrenaline into the patient's heart to hopefully
get it beating again. If it works though, the heart will be flip-flopping
around inside the chest, which is almost as bad as not beating at all.
This random beating is called fibrillation. The defib unit shocks the
patient's heart and hopefully gets it beating normally again. In other words, it de-fibrillates the heart, hence the name of the machine.
•
After Zoe's resurrected, we're told that her brain is "evolving." Same
with Rocky's brain. Whoops! Evolution is the change in the hereditary
traits of biological populations over time. By definition an individual
cannot evolve. I think the word they're looking for here is "mutating."
•
Amazingly, the film trots out the old, "Humans only use 10% of their
brains" trope! The exact same one used in last year's Lucy. As always, I feel it's my duty to point out that this is
absolutely not true. There's never any part of our brains that is not
functioning. It's The Myth That Will Not Die.
They
do have Niko say something about the entire human brain is always active,
but some parts only function at 10%, but that's not true either, and
confuses the matter even further.
•
Is there any reason why all the lab corridors had fluorescent lights at the
bottom of the walls, right above the floor? I know why the director did this— to make the lab look spooky and otherworldly. But I can't for the life of me think of
any real world reason for it. Seems like people would be constantly
busting the lights with their feet or when they swept up.
• The
film takes place almost entirely in the research lab. It's a fairly large space,
but it's still a finite lab. Somehow whenever Zoe kills someone, everyone else
in the cast manages to be somewhere else. Where exactly there are, I
have no idea.
•
As Eva somehow walks around in Zoe's psychically fabricated Hellscape,
she finds herself back in her burning apartment. She sees a vision of
Young Zoe holding a book of matches, and realizes she set the deadly
fire herself. She comforts Young Zoe, telling her that the fire wasn't
her fault.
I'm assuming Eva told her this in order to distract her or something, because the fire most definitely was Young Zoe's fault!
I'm assuming Eva told her this in order to distract her or something, because the fire most definitely was Young Zoe's fault!
•
As the fire rages in Young Zoe's apartment, we see her neighbors desperately
trying to reach under their door as they burn to death on the other
side. Thing is, there's at least six inches of space between the bottom of
the door and the floor. That's a lot of space! What good is a door that
doesn't come all the way down to the floor?
This is probably just a characteristic of Zoe's nightmarish Hellscape, but I thought it was worth pointing out.
•
Zoe can read her coworkers' minds, except when the script says she
can't. When Frank attempts to kill her by injecting her with a deadly
chemical, she "sees" the syringe he's hiding behind his back and kills
him instead.
Later
Eva tries the same trick, and Zoe doesn't see the attack coming. This
ignorance on Zoe's part may have all been part of the elaborate
Hellscape she created for Eva, but I'm not a hundred percent sure. I'd
have to watch the movie again to find out, and that ain't happening.
The Lazarus Effect could have been a decent film if it had examined the concepts it raises. Instead it was more interested in becoming a standard slasher film, littered with jump scares. I give it a C+.
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