Studio: Vertical Entertainment
Director: John R. Leonetti
Writer: Alex Greenfield, Ben Powell
Producer: Andrew A. Kosove, Broderick Johnson, Lee Nelson, David Tish
Stars: Oona Chaplin, Ramon Rodriguez, Liane Balaban
Review Score:
Summary:
A married couple inadvertently summons an ancient evil that threatens to take their newborn baby to the underworld.
Review:
“New” describes several things currently going on in Rachel and John’s life as a happily married couple. Recently converted from Christianity, John is new to Judaism. Almost as recently, Rachel won an award that’s helping to brighten her new star on the celebrity chef scene. Together, the two of them just moved into a new apartment. They did that because they’re now welcoming a new addition to their little family: a bouncing baby boy named Eli.
“Old,” on the other hand, describes the ancient evil aiming to turn their home into hell. According to apocryphal legend, Lilith preceded Eve as history’s “First Woman.” Banished from the Garden of Eden, Lilith was said to lay with wolves to spawn a race of abominations so unholy, she envied the beautiful, natural children Adam and Eve birthed. She coveted them so much that Lilith constantly kidnapped human babies until lullabies were created to keep her at bay. But Lilith cursed one of these lullabies into becoming a summoning spell. Through that song, Rachel has unknowingly invited Lilith to take her sweet son into the netherworld, unless she and her husband can find a way to rid themselves of Lilith and her supernatural sorcery first.
“Old,” unfortunately, also describes where “Lullaby” lands on the freshness scale for formulaic fright film fare. Ever since “The Possession” (review here) released in 2012, genre entertainment has enjoyed an uptick in Jewish horror, providing a welcome pocket for terror tales that don’t have to be stitched from familiar faith-based fears involving priests, exorcisms, and the age-old conflict between God and The Devil. Trouble is, as “Lullaby” shows, photocopied traits like haunting visions, haggard crones, and sudden hands on shoulders offer only routine spooks regardless of which religion’s mythology motivates supposed scares. Bible or Torah. Stole or yarmulke. Demon or dibbuk. No matter what the details are, a stale story remains unremarkable in the end.
“Lullaby” contains nothing inventive or imaginative. From its small “Do I even recognize them?” slate of faceless actors to its indistinct atmosphere, “Lullaby” looks, sounds, and plays like every other in-one-ear-and-rocketing-out-the-other thriller dimly flickering in your memory. The scent of déjà vu wafts so strongly, you might even waste several futile minutes trying to figure out if you’ve actually seen it before, should you land on the film in passing while flipping through traditional TV channels.
Capably led by veteran cinematographer and director John R. Leonetti of “Annabelle” (review here) fame, or infamy depending on personal opinion of that “The Conjuring” spinoff, plenty of seasoned professionals had a hand in producing “Lullaby.” This means that, on a technical level at least, “Lullaby” comes across as slightly better than an average DTV’er, albeit only slightly, and only as a modestly polished production.
The apartment where a majority of the movie takes place isn’t quite as cramped as the usual white-walled interior where countless indie chillers take place. And instead of falling back on an easy computer research sequence, John and Rachel each get out of the house to gather exposition, allowing scenery to breathe a bit before an audience can become too bored by seeing the same rooms repeated over and over again.
“Lullaby” still cheaps out when it can, especially at the end when an otherworldly nether-realm gets realized with some simple white curtains draped from the ceiling of a dark room. This “Other Side” by way of a Charles Band budget is hardly terrifying. Neither is the predictable plot though, so no one should expect anything more than the minimum on any level after spending a few minutes inside this middling movie anyway.
All put together, “Lullaby” presents a package of intriguing Jewish folklore on the outside, but inside the foil wrapper sits a bar of plain nougat coated in clichéd chocolate. Even if it doesn’t taste too bad to your tongue, you’d still never think to recommend the movie to anyone. As a matter of fact, you wouldn’t even think to mention it in response to the question, “What movies have you watched lately?”
Review Score: 35
“Kraven the Hunter” might as well be renamed “Kraven the Explainer,” as it’s much more of an unnecessarily tedious origin story than an action-intensive adventure.