Boogeyman
Dir. Stephen T. Kay
One of the most powerful combinations in scary movie land is a creepy set up followed by a sudden scare.  It�s extremely effective, and the makers of �Boogeyman� believe in this technique.  I mean "believe" like they went to Sam�s� and bought it wholesale.  The scares were so frequent that when my eye started to itch I didn�t scratch.  All I needed was one Murphy�s Law� timed fright and my finger would have gone through my eye --and that would be gross.  And painful.

�Boogeyman� starts off with an eight-year-old boy, Tim, who is scared of the monster in the closet.  His father tries to prove to him there�s nothing to fear by investigating the closet while all the lights are off.  This leads to fifteen years of therapy for Tim, because he gets to see his father being thoroughly killed by the monster.  Since the boogeyman doesn�t exist (according to everyone else in the world, anyway) Tim is told that his father abandoned the family.  The disbelievers convince Tim his imagination translated this to the whole father-murdered-in-front-of-eyes� thing.

Tim, as an adult, is fairly well adjusted.  He�s got a beautiful fianc�e, a great job, and a really cool apartment.  Little things still show he hasn�t completely come to terms with his childhood trauma: his apartment is a loft, with no closets, armoires, or wardrobes.  He�s removed all the doors from the cupboards, and his refrigerator is clear.  All of this looks really cool, and also means there�s nothing in his home that some � thing � can hide behind. 

When Tim�s mother dies, he decides to spend the night in the old house.  This will give him a chance to go through his mother�s things and will prove once and for all there�s nothing to be scared of.

I found �Boogeyman� a really well-done movie of the genre.  There were subtleties and complexities that usually aren�t found in a hack �n� slash� movie.  Tim seems to be more than a little psychic, which is not emphasized, but is important to the story.  There�s a distinct possibility that Tim is just plain crazy, or he actually is the boogeyman.  This last possibility is enhanced by not letting the audience clearly see the monster.

I found the story to be well done, the acting was great, and it was scary enough that my chest hurt by the time I left the theater from all the adrenaline dumps.  In fact, I only have one complaint about the movie � but it happens in the finale, which is a lousy place to have the one weakness.  It also means I can�t warn you about it without giving a major plot point away.  Still, the positives far outweigh the negatives, so �

I rate it:
Full Price

Barry Watson as Tim Jensen
Emily Deschanel as Kate (childhood friend)
Skye McCole Bartusiak as Franny (creepy yet likable little girl)
Tory Mussett as Jessica (Tim�s fianc�e)
Cameo from Lucy Lawless as Mary Jensen (Tim�s Mother)

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