Game Night (2018)
A group of friends who meet regularly for game nights find themselves trying to solve a murder mystery.
Writer:
Mark PerezStars:
Country:
USALanguage:
EnglishRelease Date:
23 February 2018 (USA) See more »Also Known As:
Noche de juegos See more »Filming Locations:
Marietta, GeorgiaCompany Credits
Production Co:
"Game Night," about game-loving partiers who get drawn into a web of
danger, is a raucously funny film that has a knack for going right up to
the edge of nastiness. Written by Mark Perez and directed by John Francis Daley and Jonathan Goldstein—who cowrote "Horrible Bosses" and "The Incredible Burt Wonderstone" and helmed the 2015 "Vacation"—it
starts out borderline ludicrous and keeps piling on improbabilities,
until it leaves our world behind and become an exercise in absurdity.
The main couple, Max and Annie (Jason Bateman and Rachel McAdams),
hosts a regular game night at their suburban home. A cleverly-edited
opening montage shows that games like Pictionary, Scrabble and charades
are the foundation of their relationship and led to their marriage. The
game night covered in this movie includes Ryan (Billy Magnussen), a dimwitted friend of Annie's; Sarah (Sharon Horgan), Ryan's much smarter date; the husband-wife team of Kevin and Michelle (Lamorne Morris and Kylie Bunbury); and Max's estranged brother Brooks (Kyle Chandler), who's a success in ways that Max can only dream about.
Then Brooks invites the guests out to his rich-guy house for a
different kind of game night, modeled on those murder mystery dinner
parties that became a fad a few years ago, and "Game Night" becomes a
roller coaster ride, whisking the audience through broad slapstick,
deadpan exchanges and imminent threats that sometimes erupt into
mayhem.
Brooks gets kidnapped in a home invasion that everybody
else assumes is just part of the game, and threatened with murder if the
others don't deliver a precious Faberge egg to a scary-voiced
mastermind who's giving them orders from afar. The rest of the team
splits up into pairs and tries to solve the mystery in their own way,
their paths periodically re-crossing, only to diverge again.
If you've seen "The Game"
or other films in which an escapist adventure turns weird and
frightening, you'll anticipate some but not all of the twists and turns
of "Game Night," and you'll appreciate the way that the screenwriter and
directors tie them to the psychology of the characters, and structure
the film as a journey of personal as well as narrative discovery. The
brothers' mutual resentment and rivalry is nearly as important here as
it was in "The Game." Max and Annie's inability to conceive a child
comes into play as well, as do the psychologies and pasts of other game
night participants. A subplot about Kevin's obsession with figuring out
whether Michelle was ever unfaithful to him has a terrific payoff that
flips over on itself. There are juicy bits for supporting players as
well, including Jeffrey Wright as an FBI agent, Danny Huston as a decadent rotter (his specialty), Michael C. Hall as a scary criminal known as The Bulgarian, and Jesse Plemons
as the divorced and seemingly personality-free cop who lives in the
same cul-de-sac as Max and Annie and seems obsessed with getting invited
to game night again. None of these characters are quite as they appear
on first or second glance.
"Game Night" is a nearly perfect
entertainment for adults over a certain age. There's a madcap car chase,
a violent incident that leads to impromptu surgery, and a house party
with echoes of the masked spectacle in "Eyes Wide Shut,"
but it's all entwined with commentary about aging, disappointment,
doomed romanticism and sibling rivalry.e actors put it all across with
flair—especially Bateman and McAdams, who complete each other's thoughts
so deftly that they really do seem as if they've been married forever,
and Plemons, who steals every scene he's in through deft underplaying.
And while there are a few touching moments, the film never tries to
claim sentimental or revelatory power it hasn't earned.
Thanks for reading and have fun watching movies.
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