A MONSTER CALLS
**1/2 (out of four)
DIRECTED BY J.A. Bayona
STARS Felicity Jones, Liam Neeson

Lewis MacDougall in A Monster Calls (Photo: Focus)

(For a look at the Best & Worst Films of 2016, go here).

Superior to The BFG but inferior to Peteโ€™s Dragon, A Monster Calls is the latest release to detail the relationship between a young child and a fantastical creature. Unfortunately, it often skews closer to the calculated artifice of the Spielberg dud rather than the emotional honesty of the Disney remake, spinning a tale about a lonely British lad named Conor (Lewis MacDougall) whose mother (Felicity Jones) is dying of cancer.

Coping with bullies at school and a crotchety grandmother (Sigourney Weaver) at home, Conor eventually receives a nocturnal visit from the talking tree that lives up on the hill. No, itโ€™s not Treebeard from the Tolkien franchise but rather an ancient yew that sounds just like Liam Neeson when he delivers that great โ€œparticular set of skillsโ€ speech from Taken. The tree informs Conor that he will tell him three stories in exchange for Conor speaking his โ€œtruthโ€ โ€” a โ€œtruthโ€ that becomes painfully obvious long before the fade-out.

Individual scenes crackle with flavor, but nearly as many segments turn out heavy-handed, with director J.A. Bayona โ€” yet to top his debut feature, the Spanish horror yarn The Orphanage โ€” more interested in carefully arranged sets and thundering effects than in anything more empathic. Itโ€™s hard to become completely invested in a movie about holding onto life when its creators are so focused on art-directing it to death.

Matt Brunson is Film Editor, Arts & Entertainment Editor and Senior Editor for Creative Loafing Charlotte. He's been with the alternative newsweekly since 1988, initially as a freelance film critic before...

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