Skip to main content
Things to Do in Fort Wayne and Beyond

Ready or Not‘ Review: Weaving proves to be excellent scream queen

Samara Weaving and Mark O’Brien star as a newly married couple in the new horror film Ready or Not.

Brent Leuthold

Brent Leuthold

Whatzup Features Writer

Published August 29, 2019

The Most Dangerous Game gets a darkly comedic twist in Ready or Not, a proudly R-rated cat-and-mouse chase with gruesome delights and a wicked sense of playfulness.

Opening with a shot of a grinning devil, the film lives up to its initial pledge by delivering some deliciously demented setpieces on top of a story about the burden of tradition and the ties that bind. With its tongue thoroughly in its cheek for all of its 95 minute runtime, it reminded me of similarly salty horror peers like The Cabin in the Woods and especially the excellent You’re Next, which it sometimes mirrors to an uncomfortable degree.

Samara Weaving stars as Grace, a young bride-to-be smitten with the good-natured and attentive Alex (Mark O’Brien). It just so happens his obscenely wealthy family made their fortune by creating games of all sorts through the generations — as Alex cheekily puts it, they’re a “gaming dominion” — so Grace only thinks it’s slightly odd that they want to play a game of hide-and-seek on their wedding night.

Little does she know, Alex’s family turns out to be a very serious set of players, which becomes obvious as they mount crossbows and shotguns in their pursuit of the hiding Grace.

There’s Daniel (Adam Brody), Alex’s hard-drinking brother who puts up a sardonic front but seems to have a soft spot for certain members of the family. That includes their sister Emilie (Melanie Scrofano), who pops just the right combination of pills to remain alert for the evening.

Their parents Tony (Henry Czerny) and Becky (Andie MacDowell) seem perfectly coiffed for the wedding but devolve into two entirely different people as the night of madness and mayhem marches on.

And then there’s Helene (Nicky Guadagni), the stone-faced matriarch whose every line of dialogue drips with sarcasm (“You continue to exist,” she greets someone at one point.)

Weaving, who made the most of a ditsy role in Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri, and also shined in Netflix’s horror comedy The Babysitter, proves to be an excellent scream queen. As a fearless and foul-mouthed “final girl” on the run from one deranged family member to another, she brings plenty of relatability and raw power to her breakout performance.

I also appreciated Czerny playing against type as the seemingly calm and composed head of the house who gradually loses his cool in tremendous fashion.

The directing duo of Matt Bettinelli-Olpin and Tyler Gillett commit to creative choices that pay off more often than they don’t. The dimly-lit castle-like setting, adorned with affluent accoutrements like massive buck mantles and even larger paintings, is perfect for the sadistic chase at the film’s core. The cinematography by Brett Jutkiewicz makes use of the popular “shaky cam” technique, which works fine for tense tracking shots but makes much less sense for more foundational shots like one of Grace standing under a doorway.

If you’re in the mood for a gory and gregarious dark comedy, then Ready or Not may be perfect for your next game night.

Coming to theaters this weekend

Don’t Let Go, starring David Oyelowo and Storm Reid, follows a father who is heartbroken by his death of his family but soon gets a call from his niece, who is somehow two weeks in the past.

Opening at Cinema Center is The Nightingale, which tells the story of a young convict seeking revenge for a horrible act of violence perpetrated against her family.

Also playing at Cinema Center is Mike Wallace Is Here, a documentary about the titular American journalist who was a host of CBS’ 60 Minutes for 50 years.

TAGS


More articles

Classic Wilde play perfect opening for season

From the perspective of a theater director, the opportunity to direct Oscar Wilde’s The Importance of Being Earnest is a true privilege and delight. The 1885 comedy of manners from […]

Box office lifts Butler thriller to No. 1 spot

Ric Roman Waugh’s Angel Has Fallen stole the No. 1 spot at last weekend’s domestic box office with $21 million in sales over its first three days of release. This […]

Songwriter back home in Indiana

Following the release of his newest album, Chrysaline, singer/songwriter Josh Garrels returns to his home state of Indiana to perform a free concert at Grace College on Sept. 6. This […]

Hitmakers of the ’80s visit Wabash

Imagine if you will being a teenager in Rochester, N.Y., in the late 1970s. There’s not much to recommend it to the average person, particularly if that person is weather […]