Bedeviled
⋆⋆⋆ out of four stars
Rated: R for terror, language and some sexual material
Theater: New Vision Oakdale 20
Impeccably well-made, this feature debut by brothers Abel and Burlee Vang shows that even a predictable horror film can boast diabolical energy, creative confidence, awesome production values and solid structure. Shot with excellent noir-esque cinematography in stately Los Angeles interiors, it sets high expectations right from the opening, and it executes the plan to near-perfection.
The classic teen-horror elements are familiar. After the unexpected death of their friend, a half-dozen high school chums — the blonde, class clown, tech nerd, girlfriend, etc. — find that Mr. Bedevil, the new personal assistant app for smartphones, has migrated into theirs from their deceased friend's. With insults and a wicked cackle, Mr. Bedevil starts giving them commands, exploiting their deepest fears and eliminating them one by one, akin to a surreal HAL 9000.
The Vangs, who won the Motion Picture Academy's prestigious 2011 Nicholl Fellowship in screenwriting, are sticklers for tight plotting, the sort of attention to detail that raises this bonechiller to a well-created genre gem. Viewers, especially those with unease about evil clowns or especially unsettling endings, will find it a very shivery, very giddy 90-minute thrill ride.
COLIN COVERT
Afterimage
⋆⋆⋆ out of four stars
Unrated by the MPAA. Mature themes. In subtitled Polish and Russian.
Theater: St. Anthony Main
Although he was heavily injured in World War I, losing an arm and a leg in military service, Wladyslaw Strzeminski went on to become one of Poland's most important artists, moving modernist abstract painting and sculpture to unparalleled heights. But his avant-garde views fell out of favor in the late 1940s as the nation's Communist leaders began to demand that art conform to their ideas of social realism. Those creative souls who remained individualist were considered enemies of the state and harshly censored.
In his last film before his death in 2016, legendary Polish filmmaker Andrzej Wajda dramatized Strzeminski's later years, an artistic master exiled and humiliated for sharing his experimental view of the world. It is a film that is heavily didactic, with extended passages of dialogue that resemble ideological communiqués. It is also stunningly well acted and painfully powerful to view.
C.C.
Pilgrimage
⋆½ out of four stars
Unrated but includes graphic violence and profanity. In English, subtitled Gaelic and French, and Latin.
Theater: AMC Apple Valley 15
If you thought that "Monty Python and the Holy Grail" would have been better with more graphic head bashing, a soundtrack of medieval Gregorian chants and no jokes, here is the film for you. Shot in bleak landscapes across Ireland, it gives us a look at the brutal dangers and general hardships of early 13th-century life.
A small group of monks slowly transports a holy relic from their cloister to Rome, its reverent power wanted by the Vatican to bless warriors soon to begin a new Crusade. They discover on the journey toward Italy that the richly jeweled case has other values for other seekers, threatening to fill more graves along its trail.
Primary roles go to Tom Holland ("Spider-Man: Homecoming") as a naive young monk and Jon Bernthal (Marvel's "Punisher" series, which hits Netflix in November) as a powerful, silent servant believed to be holding mute since his time in the previous Crusade. Still, the story moves at a tedious snail's pace. Those with limited interest in chain-mail sheaths and theology should prepare to be as bored as I was.
C.C.