THE FAITH OF ANNA WATERS
Director : Kelvin TongCast : Elizabeth Rice, Matthew Settle, Adina Herz, Colin Borgonon, Adrian Pang, Jaymee Ong, Pamelyn Chee, Paul Lucas, Victoria Mintey, Gus Donald
Genre : Horror/Thriller
Run Time : 95 mins
Opens : 12 May 2016
Rating : NC16 (Horror)
Singaporean
filmmaker Kelvin Tong takes a dip in the waters of Hollywood with this horror
thriller. Chicagoan journalist Jamie Waters (Rice) travels to Singapore when
she learns that her sister Anna (Condy) has died in an apparent suicide. Sam
Harris (Settle), Anna’s ex-husband, is staying in an old bungalow inherited
from his parents. Sam and Anna’s daughter Katie (Herz) insists that her mother
is not really dead and senses ghostly activity that indicates so. Jamie
discovers a mysterious symbol, and her research points towards an ancient
demonic entity linking a spate of seemingly unrelated suicides in Singapore. Meanwhile,
Father Matthew Goh (Pang) is tracking down the source of cyber-attacks on
multiple church websites. He brings this to the attention of Father James De
Silva (Borgonon), a priest haunted by a failed exorcism years ago. Rather than
a mere hacker, Father Goh believes the same ancient evil linking the suicides
is perpetrating the cyber-attacks. Jamie, Sam and the two priests must face a
powerful other-worldly force to stop this cycle of death.
The
Faith of Anna Waters is touted as “Singapore’s first Hollywood horror
movie”. What that actually means is this is a Singaporean film that managed to
secure financial backing from American investors, with a couple of American
actors leading the cast. An English-language genre piece has the potential to
travel, and the producers of the film hope The
Faith of Anna Waters will find an audience in the States and elsewhere
beyond Singapore.
Director Tong also wrote the screenplay and the film
is something of a mashup of the supernatural horror and techno-thriller
subgenres. The premise of a tech-savvy demon can easily become ridiculous and
certain aspects of this story seem a little dated. The project was originally
entitled “Email”, and haunted email
movies are past their sell-by date by about 15 years. There are so many disparate
ingredients flung into the pot, from cyber threats to incurable diseases to allusions
to the Biblical Tower of Babel to a family mystery rooted in Singapore’s
colonial past, that this reviewer was less spooked by the film and more curious
to see where it all leads. Unfortunately, Tong fails to satisfyingly tie these
plot threads together, with the film often falling back on genre clichés and
cribbing liberally from The Exorcist
and supernatural horror movies of that ilk.
Twilight’s Nikki Reed was originally attached to star, but was
replaced by Mad Men’s Elizabeth Rice
due to scheduling conflicts. Jamie Waters is the stock “intrepid journalist”
character through and through, snooping around abandoned basements and thumbing
through archival newspaper clippings in search of the truth. As proactive a
protagonist as Jamie is, she’s just not a terribly interesting character. Similarly,
Band of Brothers and Gossip Girls actor Settle is bland and
unremarkable as Jamie’s former brother in law. Nothing really dynamic comes of
the conflict between the two, with Jamie blaming Sam for leaving her sister and
niece.
Herz, formerly a contestant on The Voice Kids Australia, makes her acting debut in the film. Unfortunately,
her inexperience shows through, as she turns in an awkward and stiff
performance. Australian actor Borgonon brings enough dignity to bear as Father
De Silva in a performance that’s clearly patterned after Max von Sydow’s role
in the afore-mentioned The Exorcist.
Pang turns the earnestness up to eleven as priest/cyber-sleuth Father Goh, but
there’s the sense that a considerably younger actor might be better-suited to
the role as written.
The film’s production values are decent, with
cinematographer Wade Muller establishing an appropriately spooky mood. The film
employs digital visual effects sparingly, Tong wisely avoiding an overuse of
CGI. There are also some effectively-staged gory moments showcasing competent
special effects makeup work by Thai studio QFX Workshop. The film does rely too
heavily on Joe Ng and Ting Si Hao’s score to announce to the audience that they
should be afraid. Music and sound effects should enhance or accompany an
inherently scary moment instead of merely serving to startle viewers. There are
some potentially fascinating ideas at work in The Faith of Anna Waters, but these are muddled in an unnecessarily
convoluted story with a lack of focus.
Summary: The bubbling cauldron of ideas in The
Faith of Anna Waters hides a fairly conventional supernatural horror film,
the intriguing fragments failing to cohere into an engrossing whole.
RATING: 2.5 out of 5
Stars
Jedd Jong
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