Score: 3 / 5
What an utterly delightful surprise. Netflix dropped this teen slasher pretty unceremoniously this month, but it deserves to be talked about more. It's nothing new, even a cursory glance at its synopsis says as much. After several students at a small town high school are gruesomely murdered, a close group of misfits band together to figure out whodunnit. What's fun about this one is its embrace of pop culture and humor, much in the vein of Wes Craven and Kevin Williamson's Scream. Aware of their place not just in horror but in 2021, writer Henry Gayden (Shazam!) and director Patrick Brice (Creep) work hard to fit a lot of groan-inducing dialogue into what would otherwise be predictable, typical scenes, and the result is a fresh and fun new entry in the slasher-comedy subgenre.
Its opening scene is a brilliant enough case study. Football player Jackson comes home from school to take a nap before the big game tonight. He's talking to another player, and the two discuss crudely how best to relax before the game; Jackson wants to sleep, his friend intends to masturbate. One almost expects a "no homo" comment before they hang up because it's just that kind of movie. The camera zooms in on a little egg timer clicking down from an hour in the conspicuously empty kitchen. When Jackson awakes from his nap, it's already dark; why didn't his alarm go off? And why is the egg timer now on his bedside table? Ignoring the signs, he grabs his bag and runs to the front door, which is wide open, and sees that his truck is gone. Knowing now that something is horribly awry, he jumps back inside and locks the door before -- BAM -- the title flashes on the screen in gaudy yellow as synthesizer music blares. Thanks largely to John Carpenter and his contemporaries, it's an immediate homage to the '80s, even if this particular story is happening in 2021.
Other similar references lace almost every scene in There's Someone Inside Your House, so much that I wondered often if the film was too referential for its own good. Sometimes a lack of substance can be disguised when the style is thickly applied. Not so here, and I'd argue the movie uses those tropes as effective shorthand to mobilize its main messages. Which are, admittedly, hard to pinpoint. These teens have a lot of issues, and the killer knows it. Using 3D masks of each victim's face, the killer stalks, taunts, brutally murders, then displays. Each victim has secrets, including pill popping, bullying/hazing, bigotry, daddy issues, unrequited crushes; one of the joys of this movie is seeing how the "standard" rules of surviving slashers are toyed with. Because, as those of us who care about such things have noticed, the last five years or so of horror movies have increasingly and deliberately moved away from the formula Scream lambasted in 1996.
This movie takes the baton and continues running with it, featuring a remarkably diverse cast of relative unknown actors as a varied group of characters, including several people of color, a gay football star, and a non-binary young person. Most scenes take place in the school cafeteria or hallways, wherein lots of characters pop in and around to build exposition, in the speedy style of most high school comedies; here, however, their conversations are dripping with irony, constantly tapping in to "woke" language and meta-commentary on expectations or perceived standards about themselves. One iconic mean girl, reading from her college application essay, outs her classmate as nonbinary, vowing to respect "him, her, or them, depending you feel that day." Not long after, as a cop gives a press conference, he refers to catching the killer, "whoever he, she, or they may be," and while this reveals his awareness there could be multiple killers, it also smacks of a certain wokeness pervading the screenplay.
Without giving too much away, even the finale -- a really effective use of a Halloween corn maze and wildfires -- hinges on our understanding of "privilege" and how it can be used for pure evil. Once that particular mask is discarded, the movie unfortunately opens itself up to be read as an enterprise of tokenism and insincerity; the main characters are as shallowly written as their bigoted or conservative counterparts. But this genre isn't exactly known for deep characters or even much development, so it didn't bother me. Indeed, this movie jumps quickly amongst its large ensemble, giving each roughly the same amount of dramatic focus to keep everything moving. Someone's going to die within the next 15 minutes, so it's time to learn about their secrets first!
Mostly, they're all just there for the body count, and that's to be expected. Think of it not unlike Riverdale in movie form, where all the characters bicker and flirt before doing something dangerous or stupid, then bouncing back too quickly to discuss their next top suspect. It's so much fun! I mean, there's a reason Scream will be making a comeback this January, and it's that these movies can be so clever and funny even as they scare us. Or at least they scare me, because frankly someone hiding in my house with a knife is just about the scariest thing I can imagine. Granted, this movie only does that about twice, which makes me wonder why they employed this title. But, referential as it is to When a Stranger Calls and others, I'll accept it without further comment. So do yourself a favor, get a nice big glass of wine, and queue this up on Netflix. It's a wicked good time.