Love Cate Blanchett, have liked various films of Jack Black and he is great when used properly (same with Kyle MacLachlan) and love fantasy/comedy. Seeing the advertising, 'The House with a Clock in Its Wall' doesn't blow the mind in this regard but it intrigues and the idea of the story sounded great (have not read the book).
Found 'The House with a Clock in Its Walls' something of a mixed bag while finding enough to like. It won't click with everybody, with some finding it too dark or others finding it too basic and lightweight so target audience may be an issue for some, both feelings very understandable. Its best elements are very good but the flaws are obvious. Not one of the best films of the year by all means, while also not one of the worst.
The most noticeable good asset is the splendid production design, just love the house which was like a character of its own and the atmospheric photography. Personally thought the special effects were quite good, particularly enchantingly eerie were the mannequins and even more so the pumpkins. The music has a nice mix of fun and scary which matches the film's objective of being scary/fun.
Eli Roth is an unusual choice for director, for him this is quite tame and very far removed from what he is famous for, he does very competently if with not an awful lot of distinction. 'The House with a Clock in Its Walls' starts off very well, it's interesting, is amusing and entices one right in. There are some fun set pieces and some unsettling ones. A highlight is the baby body with Black's head. Much of the final act excites. The adult cast are fine. Jack Black is both serious and eccentric and manages both with aplomb. Cate Blanchett is amusing, her and Black's banter and chemistry is a high-point of the film, and Kyle MacLachlan does a lot with a somewhat underwritten and underused villain role.
Owen Vaccaro's performance however was very uneven, sometimes he was appealing and quirky but at other points, and they appear more often, the acting is forced and he sometimes over-emoted. Sunny Suljic is much more natural if not without robotic moments. As said, Izard could have been a much more interesting character with more screen time and depth for all MacLachlan's best efforts.
Some of the middle act does drag when the action loses momentum and things become especially slight in an already very slight and at times rather lightweight story that could have been fresher. The satanic elements didn't seem to gel with the rest of the film and enough for older viewers to question the target audience intended. The dialogue is funny with Black and Blanchett, could have been more natural elsewhere. The very end felt too much like an anti-climax when the mostly exciting action in the final act where much of the story leads somewhere becomes a little rushed.
In summary, a lot of good elements but also with faults too difficult to ignore. 6/10 Bethany Cox
The House with a Clock in Its Walls
2018
Action / Comedy / Family / Fantasy / Horror / Mystery / Sci-Fi / Thriller
The House with a Clock in Its Walls
2018
Action / Comedy / Family / Fantasy / Horror / Mystery / Sci-Fi / Thriller
Plot summary
Lewis Barnavelt, after losing his parents, is sent to Michigan to live with his uncle Jonathan. He discovers his uncle is a warlock, and enters a world of magic and sorcery. But this power is not limited to good people: Lewis learns of Isaac Izard, an evil wizard who constructed a magical clock with black magic, as long as it exists it will keep ticking, counting down to doomsday. He died before he could finish the clock, but he hid the clock in his house, where Uncle Jonathan now lives. Now Lewis and Jonathan must find the clock before it finishes its countdown and ends the world.
Uploaded by: FREEMAN
Director
Top cast
Tech specs
720p.BLU 1080p.BLU 720p.WEB 1080p.WEBMovie Reviews
Not timeless but has enough to make one tick
Unappealingly juvenile
THE HOUSE WITH A CLOCK IN ITS WALLS sees director Eli Roth returning to the horror genre for the umpteenth time, albeit with a twist this time around: this is a film aimed at a youthful audience, the same ones who no doubt lapped up Jack Black in the similarly-feeling GOOSEBUMPS. There's another creepy old house haunted by an evil spirit which the smug protagonist has to get rid of, but the whole thing is an uneven mix of gross-out gags and predictable CGI spooks. Black gurns and annoys throughout, while Cate Blanchett merely riffs on the old Galadriel formula she always falls back on. I found the whole thing unappealingly juvenile.
fun funhouse film
It's 1955. Young orphan Lewis Barnavelt arrives in small town Michigan to live with his uncle Jonathan Barnavelt (Jack Black). Mrs. Florence Zimmerman (Cate Blanchett) is the sassy housemate. Jonathan reveals that he's a warlock. After some begging, he reluctantly teaches Lewis magic. Florence is a powerful witch who is haunted by losses of her own. Jonathan and Florence took over the house after the previous owner evil warlock Isaac Izard (Kyle MacLachlan) constructed a magical clock to bring about an unknown calamity. Jonathan and Florence have since failed to find the clock.
This is totally fun. Eli Roth is taking a break to direct this family picture. I like the kid. I like Jack Black in this movie. It's a fun simple adventure. It's not that complicated. I am a little perplexed about Tarby Corrigan. I'd make him a different type of character. I like all the set designs and the monster designs. This is an engaging kids movie.