Product Details
The Happening [DVD] [2008]

The Happening [DVD] [2008]
Directed by M. Night Shyamalan

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Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #6349 in DVD
  • Released on: 2008-11-03
  • Rating: Suitable for 15 years and over
  • Aspect ratio: 1.85:1
  • Formats: PAL, Widescreen, Dolby, Digital Sound
  • Original language: English
  • Number of discs: 1
  • Running time: 86 minutes

Editorial Reviews

Amazon.co.uk Review
You'd expect the end of the world to be no day in the park, but in M. Night Shyamalan's The Happening, a day in the park is where the end begins. One otherwise peaceful summer morning, New Yorkers strolling in Central Park come to a halt in unison, then begin killing themselves by any means at hand. At a high-rise construction site a few blocks over, it's raining bodies as workers step off girders into space. And all the while, the city is so quiet you can hear the gentle breeze in the trees. That breeze carries a neurotoxin, and what or who put it there (terrorists?) is a question raised periodically as the film unfolds. But the question that really matters is how and whether anybody in the Middle Atlantic states is going to stay alive.

The Happening is Shyamalan's best film since The Sixth Sense, partly because he avoids the kind of egregious misjudgment that derailed The Village and Lady in the Water, but mostly because the whole thing has been structured and imagined to keep faith with the point of view of regular, unheroic folks confronted with a mammoth crisis. Focal characters are a Philadelphia high-school science teacher (Mark Wahlberg, excellent), his wife (Zooey Deschanel) and math-teacher colleague (John Leguizamo), and the latter’s little girl (Ashlyn Sanchez). Instinct says get out of the cities and move west; most of the film takes place in the delicately picturesque Pennsylvania countryside, with menace hovering somewhere in the haze. There are no special effects (apart from a wind machine and some breakaway glass), but the movie manages to be deeply unsettling in the matter-of-factness of its storytelling. Especially effective is its feel for what we might call the surrealism of banality. One warning sign that someone has been infected by the neurotoxin is irrational or erratic speech and behavior, yet Shyamalan has a genius for dialogue that sounds normal and everyday as it's spoken, yet flies apart grenade-like a second later as its logic (or illogic) sinks in. Then there's Deschanel's eye-rolling dodginess about the messages some guy has been leaving on her cellphone. Or the fellow (Frank Collis) who addresses his greenhouse plants as though they were his children--has a stray toxic zephyr wafted his way, or is this just his idea of normal? --Richard T. Jameson, Amazon.com

Synopsis
In THE HAPPENING, M. Night Shyamalan serves up a slice of apocalyptic strangeness. The film opens onto New York City's Central Park with a crowd of people enjoying an idyllic summer day. The carefree scene soon takes a terrifying turn, when out of nowhere, hordes of people begin to commit suicide en masse. People scramble to make sense of the pandemonium, and many believe it is a terrorist attack. It appears that some sort of deadly toxin is being released into the air. Cut to Elliot (Mark Wahlberg), a science teacher in Philadelphia. When he learns of the attack on New York, he meets up with his wife Alma (Zooey Deschanel), his friend Julian (John Leguizamo), and Julians's daughter, Jess (Ashlyn Sanchez). They make plans to get out of the city via train, but the train is evacuated in the middle of a small Pennsylvania town. When they learn that the mysterious toxin is spreading its way across the Northeast, they break up into groups, with Elliot, Alma, and Jess running through open farmland in search of safety. They are unsure of where to hide, or what exactly they are hiding from, until Elliot slowly forms a theory about the threat. He fights to keep Alma and Jess free from harm, and the film builds to a bizarre, unsettling climax.
Shyamalan's premise of escaping an unknown, unexplainable attack is a timely one, and is quite chilling in concept. THE HAPPENING succeeds in creating the frenzied scariness of THE BIRDS, combined with the outlandish death scenes and unusual plot line found in B-movie classics. For fans of campy horror in the vein of THE EVIL DEAD, it is truly something to behold.


Customer Reviews

lawnmower Man3
So, I finally saw this film last night; and to be honest it wasn't that bad.
Even before it was released, the whole movie-watching-world seemed hell-bent on taking this film down, and that they did; I've read review after review and each one is more slating than the last. One of the reasons for this is because people aren't reviewing the film...they're reviewing M. Night, it would seem that the movie-watching- world are peeved that his latter films haven't hit the mark of his first two(three, Signs rocks) and for this his films get completely over-scrutinised. I mean it really is a shame that people couldn't give Lady in the Water more of a chance, because I really did see a lot of heart in that film.
Is it happening...Okay so it's been said but, the acting in this film is bad! But remember this...the actors are only as good as the director and the director is only as good as the scrip, it's a shame when a bit part (old woman in house) out acts both the leads, but the main problem here is the dialogue...there is none, no banter, no improv' just weak characters with little to say.
The films only saving grace is the, somewhat, shocking imagery...and the part where those two geeky kids get shot.
All in all I enjoyed watching this film, mainly because it gave me so many laughs...oh and that thing about the bees is true...if they all died the whole human race would be wiped out within four years.



Surely as mis-titled a movie as there has been in a while...2
It's a B-movie. No other word to describe it. And as a non-intellectual throw-away B-movie, it's not that bad. However it comes laden with expectation - it's a Shymalayan movie - so what's the hook, and what's the twist!
Well, the hook is that mysterious deaths start occurring in the NE of the United States. Confusion reigns, as the news alternates between fear this is a terrorist attack, to the gradual realization this is.. well, just in case you haven't seen it yet I won't spoil the only `surprise' in the movie. But wait, there IS another surprise - when did Mark Wahlberg become such a dismal actor! The lines, the delivery, the timing, everything is just what you'd expect from a poorly edited 70's grindhouse movie. Can he be doing it deliberately as an in-joke? If so, the jokes on him because its cringe-worthy. If you can just take it at a B-movie level, you might get some satisfaction - because there isn't anything else to enjoy in the movie. The director has lost his flair for the gradual reveal, the careful structure, and the cinematic tools as storytelling devices.. it's a movie that is no more then the lowest denominator you might expect a movie with a plot like this to have.
The extras talk much about how this was the director's exciting foray into the world of an adult rating. And true, some of the deaths are disconcerting, and yes, there is maybe one cheap shock to be had, but sadly it's all so straightforward, and lacks any impact, except the occasional moment of impact as you hit the wall with your head at the ineptitude.
As for the twist - there is none. It's just one of those movies that you keep thinking it will go somewhere and it goes on, and on.. then.. sort of ends. And that's it.
Extras - deleted scenes are more of the same, gag reel is not as funny as some of the actual lines in the movie, featurettes are slight and frustratingly broken up into 5 to 10 minute chunks. Perhaps the movie might have been better if it had the same done to it.

Should be called "It's NOT Happening"1
Of all the rubbish movies I have seen, and I have seen alot, I have just created and new sub zero category for this movie. The Happening, it should be called, "It's not Happening" because that's it, nothing happens in the whole movie!! You wait and wait and guess what...nothing. Highlight of the movie: seeing people standing there motionless!! Oh yes and leaves blowing in the wind!!