Old Review

Old (2021)
An escape to a tropical paradise turns horrifying when a group of beachgoers, including on-the-rocks couple Guy (Gael García Bernal) and Prisca (Vicky Krieps), realise that their private oasis is ageing them rapidly. With the years and infirmities accruing by the hour, the race is on to solve the mystery.

by Joshua Rothkopf |
Updated on
Release Date:

23 Jul 2021

Original Title:

Old (2021)

Nobody expects another The Sixth Sense from M. Night Shyamalan — that kind of poise generally comes only once a career — but there’s a cracked conviction to some of his silliest misfires that can be enjoyable in itself. (Killer shrubs?) Old, the writer-director’s latest, is probably the most boring movie he could make at this point: a perfectly fine, occasionally elegant, sometimes spooky but rarely ridiculous beach mystery for anyone who hasn’t binge-watched Lost lately. You won’t mind it, nor will you think you’re in the hands of a master, unless your idea of mastery is informed by certain supernatural episodes of Fantasy Island.

Old (2021)

To that gorgeous beach (the Dominican Republic comes off better than most of the cast) a handful of vacationing families are shuttled, buttered up by their resort manager who promises a “once-in-a-lifetime experience”. Shyamalan is still doing that thing where he uses realistic adult problems to distract us from the fake stuff; this time it’s divorce, as a loveless husband and wife (Gael García Bernal and Vicky Krieps, neither fully persuasive) yell at each other behind closed doors.

There’s a poetry to this idea, but Shyamalan rarely engages with the emotional underpinnings.

Marital difficulties have a way of fading, though, when it’s discovered that everyone on the beach — including lazier creations like a bratty trophy wife (Abbey Lee), an arrogant doctor (Rufus Sewell) and a rapper (Aaron Pierre) — is ageing at the rate of several months an hour. Plus, they can’t leave. There’s a poetry to this idea, the years wafting by like summer breezes. But Shyamalan rarely engages with the emotional underpinnings of the material (the source is a 2013 graphic novel, Sandcastle). More often, he goes for shock payoffs: minutes after we see two children playing with plastic pails, they’ve become smitten teenagers walking hand in hand, a pregnant belly swelling alarmingly.

The plot gets bogged down in desperate escape attempts: swimming, free-solo climbing, underwater diving. Shyamalan’s camera is equally restless, whipping around the characters in a breathless run. It’s his best idea. Time waits for no-one, especially on this beach. (You may roll your eyes at the director’s inevitable cameo, during which he can be seen peering through a Hitchcock-sized zoom lens, an unnecessary flex.) The better actors, including Thomasin McKenzie and Alex Wolff, add a hint of dazed whiplash to their rushed adolescences.

Is there a twist? No director has ever saddled himself more with the phony heft of third-act surprises. You won’t read any spoilers here, but in making Old, Shyamalan, 50, seems at a midpoint. His new movie constantly threatens to be better than it is — deeper, more metaphysical, less beholden to gimmicks. Defiantly, it sticks to being about a haunted beach. And that’s okay. But someone should tell this filmmaker, so willing to waste time with elaborate contraptions, that the clock’s ticking.

A Twilight Zone–worthy premise, subtly sold by ace make-up effects, makes for a decent-enough thriller, intriguing in the moment but ultimately too timid to say anything meaningful about ageing.
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