Movie Review: The Happening
Published June 19, 2008
To say that I had a little in the way of expectations for The Happening would be an understatement. M. Night Shyamalan is a very talented director whose writing skills have become suspect over his past few films. In 1999 he burst onto the scene with the phenomenon that was The Sixth Sense, that was followed by the even better (in my opinion) Unbreakable, he then suffered a bit of a dip with the good Signs, but since then he has been in decline with The Village and Lady in the Water.
Now we have a film with a horrendous title and an even worse tag line. It seems like whoever designs these promotional campaigns cannot get away from trading on past success. Yes, I understand it is the nature of the beast, the old "what have you done for me lately?" belief. Still, could you not come up with a tag better than: "We've Sensed It. We've Seen the Signs. Now.... It's Happening."? Seriously, that is just an awful line. If that isn't enough, another focus of the television commercials is the fact that this is Shyamalan's first R-rated film. I got the feeling that this is was being set up as a scapegoat if the film flopped at the box office.
So, with the expectations suitably in check, I entered the theater hoping for the best and expecting the worst. The trailers played, and there I sat wanting this to be the film to get M. Night Shyamalan's considerable talent back on track. The film started, the credits began to roll, the screen filled with blue sky, clouds, and emanating from the speakers were the first notes of another winning score from James Newton Howard. So far, so good.
The Happening is something of a self-contained oddity within this summer blockbuster season. With it, M. Night takes a quieter, more introspective approach to the material, allowing it to flow of its own accord. The story does not get pushed around by special effects and is driven in a much more naturalistic fashion than, to pick another disaster film, The Day After Tomorrow, which is more about the whiz bang than it is about subtle character moments.
Not much happens (sic) in The Happening. One morning, in Central Park, people suddenly become disoriented, begin to act oddly, and, without warning, commit suicide. Before long, these, for lack of a better word, symptoms spread outward from that point. They also begin to pop up in other city parks, always spreading out until much of the Northeast is being affected. Newscasts place blame on terrorists, although there are other theories. However, nothing moves beyond that stage of theory.
That covers the impetus for this cautionary tale. At the center of it is Philadelphia high school science teacher Elliot Moore (Mark Wahlberg). When he learns of what has happened in New York, he, along with his wife Alma (Zooey Deschanel), his friend and fellow teacher Julian (John Leguizamo), and his young daughter Jess (Ashlyn Sanchez), hop a train to Harrisburg, PA. The recommendation of the newscasters is to get away from the city.
The train strands them in some miniscule Pennsylvania town when they loose contact with "everyone." At this point Julian leaves Jess in the care of Elliot and Alma, while he catches a ride with some folks as he goes off to find his wife. Elliot, Alma, and Jess catch a ride with a kindly, but eccentric, couple that rattle off a theory that plants are behind this. Soon enough the core trio is with another group of people attempting to stay ahead of the rapidly spreading "happening" (this word is uttered many, many times before the film is over). Before long, they have an encounter with an old woman, Mrs. Jones (Betty Buckley), where more things happen.
- Movie Review: The Happening
- Published: June 19, 2008
- Type: Review
- Section: Video
- Filed Under: Video: Suspense and Mystery
- Writer: Chris Beaumont
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Comments
The Birds comparison is a good one that I hadn't considered. I have a feeling I may like this more upon subsequent viewings.
I may not like all of what M. Night has done, but he is a voice that stands apart from your standard Hollywood output. That is always a good thing, successful or not.
Chris, you always write excellent reviews that are dead-on to the point. I saw the movie last night, and agree with your assessment entirely. Though definitely not my favorite M. Night film, it would be near impossible to top "The Sixth Sense" or "Unbreakable," but at least he's still bringing something to the table.


Christopher Beaumont spends much of his time writing about entertainment when he isn't sitting in a movie theater. He is known around the office as the "Movie Guy" and is always ready to talk about his favorite form of entertainment and offer up recommendations. Interests include science fiction, horror, and metal music. His writings can be found at 


I liked it too.
It kind of reminded me of Hitchcock's The Birds in that it required no real explanation and, instead, worked as a product of a few potential theories. The notion that nobody really knows what occurs in the film was quite compelling, actually, and I wasn't disappointed at all. In fact, I was quite impressed with it.