Odd Thomas (2013)
Comedy | Fantasy | Mystery | Romance | Thriller
Tagline: When evil comes to town, he is the only one who can stop it.
Odd Thomas is an adaptation of Dean Koontz's best-selling thriller.
Small-town fry cook Odd Thomas (Anton Yelchin) is an ordinary guy with a paranormal secret: he sees dead people, everywhere. When a creepy stranger shows-up with an entourage of ghostly bodachs - predators who feed on pain and portend mass destruction -
Odd knows that his town is in serious trouble. Teaming up with his sweetheart Stormy (Addison Timlin) and the local sheriff (Willem Dafoe), Odd plunges into an epic battle of good vs evil to try to stop a disaster of apocalyptic proportions. Based on the
best-selling thriller by Dean Koontz, Odd Thomas is a supernatural action thrill-ride from the acclaimed director of The Mummy and The Mummy Returns.
Storyline: Small-town fry cook Odd Thomas (Anton Yelchin) is an ordinary guy with a paranormal secret: he sees dead people, everywhere. When a creepy stranger shows-up with an entourage of ghostly bodachs - predators who feed on
pain and portend mass destruction - Odd knows that his town is in serious trouble. Teaming up with his sweetheart Stormy (Addison Timlin) and the local sheriff (Willem Dafoe), Odd plunges into an epic battle of good vs evil to try to stop a disaster of
apocalyptic proportions. Based on the best-selling thriller by Dean Koontz. Written by PR
Reviewer's Note: Reviewed by Michael Reuben, March 13, 2014 -- Odd Thomas is an independent fantasy film with big budget aspirations. It is based on the first of a successful series of books by horror and sci-fi author
Dean Koontz, who told attendees at 2008's Comic-Con that he was delighted with the script by writer/director Stephen Sommers (the Mummy trilogy and G.I. Joe: The Rise of Cobra). Unfortunately, the film fell victim to the uncertainties of
independent financing. Production was delayed for lack of funds, and the release date had to be pushed back due to litigation among the financing partners over costs of prints and advertising. When Odd Thomas finally saw U.S. theater screens on
February 28, 2014, the release was limited and the advertising was nil. Critical reaction was poor, but in today's market the critics' opinion of a fantasy film hardly matters. Availability and fan awareness are enough to draw an audience, especially with
an established brand, but Odd Thomas' distribution was so weak that Box Office Mojo doesn't even list it. The fans will have to experience it on this first-rate, though featureless, Blu-ray from RLJ/Image Entertainment.
His first name really is "Odd", and he's played by Anton Yelchin, who is best known as navigator Pavel Chekov in J.J. Abrams' reboot of the Star Trek franchise. Odd works as a short order cook in the small California town of Pico Mundo, where he
tries to keep a low profile so that he doesn't suffer his mother's fate. Odd's mother (Leonor Varela) was confined to a mental institution because she wouldn't keep silent about her visions. Odd has inherited his mother's ability, but neither of them is
schizophrenic. They're both possessed of psychic powers, and Odd's are especially distinctive. The souls of victims who have died by violence seek him out, and although they cannot speak, they direct Odd to their killer so that he can bring them to
justice. Author Koontz, who is nothing if not sophisticated about popular culture, anticipated the obvious comparison to The Sixth Sense by having Odd quote it himself: "I may see dead people", he says, "but then, by God, I do something
about it."
Odd is assisted in his psychic detective work by the local chief of police, Wyatt Porter, who is played with cheerful sang-froid by Willem Dafoe, cast against type as a normal guy who has learned to trust Odd's insights but doesn't want to know how he
comes by them. The chief arranges cover stories for Odd and bails him out of trouble whenever he needs it. The one person who truly understands Odd is his sweetheart, Stormy Llewellyn (Addison Timlin, Best Man Down), who is unfazed (and rather
turned on) by her boyfriend's unusual powers. When Stormy isn't working at the ice cream parlor in the local mall, she and Odd banter like a Gen Y version of Nick and Nora Charles.
Odd's powers include the ability to see demonic creatures known as "bodachs" (a Scottish term for "bogeyman"). In their CGI rendering, bodachs may remind some viewers of the "gravelings" that played a key role in the Bryan Fuller-created Showtime series
Dead Like Me, except that gravelings initiated deadly events, whereas bodachs merely show up when something terrible is about to occur so that they can feed off the fear and horror. When Odd see bodachs in Pico Mundo, he knows something bad is
coming. He begins to see them in unprecedented numbers when an unfamiliar customer comes into his coffee shop one day. Odd dubs him "Fungus Bob", because of his bizarrely died hair and seedy appearance. (Bob is played by Broadway star Shuler Henlsey, who
was the monster in the Mel Brooks's musical adaptation of Young Frankenstein and at times seems to be channeling Boris Karloff in his performance as Fungus Bob.) Besides an influx of bodachs, the appearance of Fungus Bob inspires dreams of a
massacre. Odd is now convinced that Pico Mundo is headed for some sort of apocalypse.
Odd's investigation of Fungus Bob leads him to all sorts of unexpected places, including the dreams of Stormy's co-worker, Viola (Gugu Mbatha-Raw), who seems to have her own touch of clairvoyance. Odd tracks Bob to a truly disgusting cabin outside town,
where the bodachs seem to be massing, but what exactly is Bob planning? Sommers throws out a lot of seemingly obvious clues that turn out to be equally red herrings, as Odd keeps following leads that bring him no closer to the truth but provide ample
opportunity for gross-out humor, much of it involving large bugs.
Yelchin is ideal casting for Odd, because he plays the part with sincerity, which also means that his Odd is conscious of just how bizarre his existence really is. Timlin's Stormy is thoroughly charming, providing an essential balance and keeping her man
connected to the human world. One gets the sense that, while she's fascinated by what Odd sees, she's just as glad she doesn't have to see it herself (which makes sense in scenes where bodachs swirl all around them). Timlin is an engaging actress, and she
makes Stormy the movie's beating heart.
The conclusion of Odd Thomas leaves an obvious opening for a sequel, but it seems unlikely that one will be made, given the film's weak reception. That is all the more reason for fans of the series, or just those who are curious, to experience the
film now while it is still fresh. The performances are lively, the effects are professional, and the Blu-ray's image and sound are superior. Despite the lack of extras, recommended.
[CSW] -2.4- Overall it was moderately enjoyable but I would not say remotely that it was something I'd see again. The corniness and total lack of well-defined conflict/struggle just left me wanting an R rated version of the story. There is definitely a
cheesy teen novel feel to it all. After the movie I just don't feel like it's changed me in any way or that I've learned anything except that the Dean Koontz's best-selling thriller book, on which the movie was based, is probably well worth reading…
watching the movie again, not so much. The twist ending is a bit unexpected given the otherwise corniness, but a bit cliché if you've seen enough psychological thrillers. Not really any purpose except to frustrate you with an ending you really did not
want although it probably followed the book's ending as a setup for his following books.
[V4.5-A4.0] MPEG-4 AVC - No D-Box.
Streamed Netflix (HD)
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