Glass (2019)
Cast
- James McAvoy as Kevin Wendell Crumb / The Horde / The Beast / Patricia / Dennis / Hedwig / Barry / Jade / Orwell / Heinrich / Norma
- Bruce Willis as David Dunn / The Overseer
- Samuel L. Jackson as Elijah Price / Mr. Glass
- Anya Taylor-Joy as Casey Cooke
- Sarah Paulson as Dr. Ellie Staple
- Spencer Treat Clark as Joseph Dunn
- Charlayne Woodard as Mrs. Price
- Luke Kirby as Pierce
Director
- M. Night Shyamalan
Producer
- Jason Blum
Editor
- Luke Franco Ciarrocchi
- Renaldo Kell
Director of Photography
- Mike Gioulakis
Writer
- M. Night Shyamalan
Original Music Composer
- West Dylan Thordson
Drama, Horror, Mystery, Science Fiction, Thriller
129 minutes
More “Split 2” than “Unbreakable 2,” M. Night
Shyamalan has finally produced his first direct sequel, the mash-up
that is “Glass,” bringing together characters from two of his biggest
hits. As the end of “Split” hinted, that film took place in the same universe as Shyamalan’s 2000 film “Unbreakable,”
still his best work to date. The promise of the coda to “Split” is
fulfilled in “Glass,” bringing together Shyamalan’s vision of the
Freudian brain in the uncontrolled id of DID-afflicted Kevin Crumb (James McAvoy), the regulating force of the super-ego in David Dunn (Bruce Willis), and the moderator between the hero and the villain in the ego that is Elijah Price aka Mr. Glass (Samuel L. Jackson).
Once again, Shyamalan is playing with comic book tropes, adding his
twists to monologuing heroes and villains who are remarkably self-aware
of their own genre arcs. There’s a truly ambitious film buried in
“Glass,” and I do mean buried. The problem is that Shyamalan
can’t find the story, allowing his narrative to meander, never gaining
the momentum it needs to work. Say what you will about “Unbreakable” and
even “Split,” they had a propulsive energy that’s lacking here, at
least partially because any sense of relatability is gone. “Glass” is a
misfire, and it’s the kind of depressing misfire that hurts even more
given what it could have been.
“Unbreakable” and “Split” have protagonists
thrust into life-changing situations. The former told the story of David
Dunn, the only survivor of a horrible train crash, who learned that he
was more than human. The latter tells two stories—that of a girl, Casey (Anya Taylor-Joy,
who returns here and is given woefully little to do), forced to
discover her own strengths, and that of a mentally ill patient who may
be more than your average person diagnosed with DID.
As
“Glass” opens, we know David Dunn, now known in Philadelphia as the
mysterious protector called the Overseer and working with his son (Spencer Treat Clark),
is a superhero. And we know Kevin Crumb has a personality called The
Beast that can climb walls and take shotgun blasts. And yet so much
of “Glass” is devoted to trying to convince David and Kevin that they
are not super in any way. In the pursuit of another twist ending,
Shyamalan takes a narrative step back, covering so much of the same
ground that the two previous films did instead of carving a new path.
He’s so obsessed with ending on a gotcha note that he delays any sort of
narrative interest until then, basically forcing his audience to tread
water until that point. Think long and hard about what you know at the
end of “Glass” as opposed to what you knew at the beginning and you’ll
realize how hollow this whole venture has been.
Most
of “Glass” takes place at Raven Hill Memorial Psychiatric Hospital. In
what could be called the prologue, David/Overseer tracks Kevin/Horde
down after the villainous man with multiple personalities kidnaps four
young women, holding them in an abandoned factory. The two men fight,
and one immediately gets the sense that something is not quite right.
This showdown between two of the most memorable characters in
Shyamalan’s history lacks the punch or creative fight choreography fans
should expect. The pair head out a window and into the arms of Dr. Ellie
Staple (Sarah Paulson),
the confident doctor who shuttles them off to the same psych ward
that’s been housing Mr. Glass for almost two decades. Glass is kept in a
deeply vegetative state in a room in the same wing as David and Kevin.
Dr. Staple tries to convince all three that they are not really super in
any way. David’s strength isn’t that abnormal and Kevin’s powers as The
Beast could be explained away.
In the
midsection of “Glass,” Shyamalan hits every beat more than once, almost
joylessly. Paulson gives the same speech multiple times, and a bit with a
bright light that can change which personality of Kevin’s dominates
goes on forever ... and then happens again. Shyamalan is determined to
cycle through the back stories of these characters, even employing
footage from “Unbreakable” and “Split” in flashbacks as if he doesn’t
realize that 95% of viewers have seen them. He seems so intent on the
reveals of his final fifteen minutes that he forgets to take
opportunities to make the nearly two hours before that interesting. Why
is Raven Hill such a dull bore to look at? Why is Shyamalan determined
to make another film about whether or not superheroes are superheroes
instead of just building on the foundation he’s created? Imagine “The Avengers” retelling all the origin stories and then questioning whether or not The Hulk is really a superhero or just an angry dude.
There are glimpses of the crazy, ambitious
movie that “Glass” could have been, and that’s what saves it from
complete "Happening"-level disaster. Once again, McAvoy is giving it his
all, even if he’s not getting as much back in return as he did
last time (and is balanced by another half-hearted Willis performance
in which I swear you can practically see him fall asleep). And there are
just enough out-there ideas in “Glass” that it’s impossible to
completely dismiss even if they don't come together. It’s that fine line
between ambitiously clunky in a way that engages the viewer and just
sloppy. I honestly kept trying to engage with “Glass” as a fan of
Shyamalan’s early films, comic books, and movies that try to mash-up
familiar genres in a way that makes a new one. I ultimately resigned
myself to the fact that it’s not my fault that it’s broken.
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