Most Active

Lost Boys 3 Finds Its Leading Hottie
5 new posts | 5 total posts
The Twilight Saga: New Moon
2 new posts | 2 total posts
The Making of The Wolfman Featurette
2 new posts | 3 total posts
The Haunting in Connecticut
1 new posts | 30 total posts

Reviews

The Shortcut

Reviewed by: Paul Doro
Rating:
6 out of 10
Movie Details:
View here


Cast:
Drew Seeley as Derek
Katrina Bowden as Christy
Dave Franco as Mark
Shannon Woodward as Lisa

Directed by: Nicholaus Goossen

Review:

Back in June 2008, Adam Sandler's production company Happy Madison announced that it was getting into the horror business with an offshoot called Scary Madison. Its first genre effort would be The Shortcut, directed by Grandma's Boy helmer Nicholaus Goossen. After a long period of no updates, what initially had been planned as an R-rated theatrical release wound up as a PG-13 direct-to-DVD offering.

The end result is an odd little number that veers back and forth between a by-the-numbers teen horror flick and something eerier than you might expect. While far from a total success, The Shortcut is a decent rental that plays well on the small screen.

The prologue is set in 1945. Two Hartley High School students decide to take a shortcut through the woods. This leads to a spooky encounter with a slingshot-wielding kid. Flash forward to present day Hartley. Derek (Drew Seeley) is the new kid at school. His younger brother, acting on a dare, ends up crossing paths with a dead dog and a crazy old man on the same shortcut. When one of his fellow classmates suspects that the dog is his, Derek and his friends decide to investigate.

The Shortcut is at its weakest when it caters to younger viewers. There is plenty of high school melodrama thanks to Derek and his crush on Christy (Katrina Bowden), who is dating a football star. Plus, there are boo scares and pop culture references galore. Each aspect is irritating.

It doesn't help that the titular shortcut isn't even remotely threatening. At the very least it should be ominous and creepy. Instead, it is a typical, rather scenic path through the woods that starts and ends in a normal suburban neighborhood. One would be more tempted to take a leisurely stroll down this shortcut as opposed to running in the opposite direction.

Still, The Shortcut has enough going for it to offset its weaknesses. The cast is appealing, with Bowden and Woodward particularly easy on the eyes. Also, at about 80 minutes plus credits, it moves briskly and doesn't allow the viewer an opportunity to get bored. Finally, the conclusion is pretty messed up and fun. The R-rated side shows itself in the last 10 or 15 minutes, taking the movie to some dark and nasty places only hinted at during the previous hour. A sledgehammer is especially well-utilized.

The nasty side that emerges near the end is clearly at odds with the teen elements that precede it. You can tell that a last minute decision was made to make it PG-13 and the two sides coexist uneasily.

Coming from a young director working in horror for the first time, it's a respectable effort. Not great or all that memorable, to be sure, but easy enough to watch and better than the rating would suggest.

| 1 comment | Add a comment

Related Articles

From Shock Till You Drop

From our network of sites

Comments

Posted by: taryn on October 29, 2009 at 08:02:45

I think that you are full of ****. I thought the Shortcut was a really good movie and so does everyone else that i know has seen it. It might have been a little bit predictable but so what, It pisses on most of the other movies that are being brought out where you know exactly what is going to happen cause you seen it all before. At least Adams Sandler's movies are his own.Half the time you critics are ****ed anyway. You must be all old and boring people


Add a comment

Name:   

 

E-mail:   

 

Comments:   

 

Security Code:   

 

 
 

 Remember my name/e-mail address