Red Lights (2012) [Blu-ray]
Drama | Mystery | Thriller

Tagline: How much do you want to believe?

Veteran paranormal researchers Dr. Margaret Matheson (Sigourney Weaver) and Tom Buckley (Cillian Murphy) debunk fraudulent claims of ghost whispering, faith healing and other psychic phenomena by detecting what Matheson calls "red lights," the subtle tricks behind every staged supernatural occurrence. But when the legendary blind psychic Simon Silver (Robert De Niro) comes out of retirement after 30 years, his once-fearless adversary Matheson warns Buckley to back off, fearing reprisal from the powerful Silver.

Determined to discredit Silver, Buckley and his star student (Elizabeth Olsen) use every tool at their disposal to uncover the truth behind the charismatic, spoon-bending, mind reader. But Buckley is forced to reexamine his own core beliefs as his quest builds to a mind blowing conclusion in this taut psychological thriller from award-winning writer and director Rodrigo Cortes (Buried).

Storyline:
The skeptical psychologist Dr. Margaret Matheson and her assistant, the physicist, Tom Buckley, are specialists in disclosing fraudulent paranormal phenomena. When the famous psychic Simon Silver reappears to his public after many years of absence, Tom becomes obsessed to investigate whether Silver is a fraud or not. Written by Claudio Carvalho, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil

Editor's Note: It's hard to believe that nineteen years have passed since The X-Files first appeared on TV, but fans who remember its initial blast of chilly dislocation may appreciate what writer-director Rodrigo Cortés (Buried) attempted in Red Lights and, at moments, achieved. Like Chris Carter's influential series, Cortés' film is set in a parallel universe that resembles our own just enough to make its dramatic interplay between belief and skepticism compelling, but not so much as to interfere with the suspension of disbelief. Carter's FBI barely resembled the real one, and Cortés' version of academia, law enforcement and scam artists doesn't stand up to scrutiny either, but that's beside the point. Neither Carter nor Cortés was interested in realism.

The film's title refers to "discordant notes"—warning signs, giveaways, inconsistencies—that alert the paranormal debunker played by Sigourney Weaver to the con behind whatever psychic phenomena she's been asked to investigate. Appropriately enough, the film's visual texture is full of visual "red lights" (figuratively, not literally) that its world isn't to be taken too seriously. First and foremost is the distancing effect familiar from The X-Files and countless other thrillers, when Canadian exteriors are used to substitute for a quintessentially American location (here, Columbus, Ohio) so that everything is "off" and nothing looks quite right. Cortés and his cinematographer, Xavi Giménez (The Machinist, Transsiberian), add to this effect with stylized photography, an almost gothic use of shadow and the frequent deployment of video screens and shots through cameras. It's as if Cortés is doing everything possible to undercut the realistic illusion of cinema and convert the screen into a giant stage on which a morality play about faith and illusion can play itself out.

Does it work? Not entirely. The script for Red Lights isn't grand enough to justify so much artifice, despite the efforts of an A-list cast that includes, in addition to Weaver, Robert De Niro, Cillian Murphy, Toby Jones, Joely Richardson and rising star Elizabeth Olsen. The cast keeps things interesting, but in the end Cortés hasn't achieved anything more than an overdressed genre tale that barely scratches the surface of the more profound questions of faith he clearly wanted to explore.

Drs. Margaret Matheson (Weaver) and Tom Buckley (Murphy) work out of a small and underfunded department at Columbus University, from which they investigate suspected paranormal activity and people who claim to be mediums or psychics. With one exception, Matheson has never encountered a situation she couldn't explain or expose as a fraud. Murphy, who has a degree in physics from M.I.T., is her "hard science" assistant.

Their rival is Dr. Paul Shackleton, whose generously funded department is devoted to documenting the existence of extrasensory perception, clairvoyance, telekinesis and all of the other "fringe" phenomena that Dr. Matheson doubts. If Dan Ackroyd's Ray Stantz from Ghostbusters had ever achieved academic credibility, he'd be Shackleton. Matheson, though, has a low opinion of her colleague, who she thinks is so eager to find ESP that he cuts corners—and she doesn't hesitate to show him up in front of his subordinates. Their rivalry isn't a friendly one. (Posters at IMDb have mocked the plot device that has Shackleton's department getting more funding than Matheson's, but it's not much of a stretch if you have any experience with university politics.)

Buckley could get a much better job doing straightforward physics, and Matheson tells him so, but, like Matheson, Buckley has personal motivations for doing this unusual work. In Buckley's case, it goes back to a relative who was persuaded by a faith healer not to seek treatment for a deadly illness. In Matheson's, it goes back to her son, who fell into a coma when he was a teenager and has been kept alive by machines for many years. Matheson can't bear to pull the plug. Her son's condition, in turn, is bound up with the one psychic she failed to debunk, a reclusive blind man named Simon Silver (De Niro), who has just announced a return to public life after many years in seclusion. A showman and faith healer with a cult-like following, Silver sells out huge auditoriums with his performances, as he is shepherded around by his protective publicist, Monica Handsen (Richardson). Matheson is afraid of Silver, but Buckley insists that they go after him. Eventually they do, having recruited a student from their class, Sally Owen (Olsen), as an assistant.

Their inquiries into Silver unleash all manner of strange forces, some mysterious (Buckley's equipment goes berserk at a key moment), and some old-fashioned (Silver has thugs protecting him). A visit to an imprisoned con man named Palladino (Leonardo Sbaraglia), who "trained" with Silver and whom Matheson helped expose as a phony psychic, proves unilluminating. But the real shock comes when Silver announces that he's agreed to be "tested" by Shackleton's group under rigorously controlled scientific conditions. If he passes these tests, he'll receive scientific validation from a major university that will enhance both his credibility and his already considerable public profile. The need to expose him (if indeed he is a fraud) has never been more urgent.

Red Lights has a number of "reveals" along the way, and some of them are easy to anticipate (maybe all of them, depending on one's personal propensity for second-guessing movie plots). There's a school of "criticism" that finds a film flawed when you can see a plot development coming, but I don't subscribe to it. The earliest known form of western drama, Greek tragedy, relied on the audience's knowledge of the story's end. In modern times, Alfred Hitchcock insisted that true suspense results from giving the audience more information than the characters. Red Lights follows this directive by planting clues about major events to come—"red lights", as it were, that something is awry in the current picture we're seeing. Viewers who pick up on these signals are simply following the film's narrative design, not finding its flaws.

What undoes Red Lights is the same limitation that ultimately took down The X-Files, which is that by the time you unravel all the artifice and mystery, there turns out to be not much there. The poster on Buckley's wall may have changed from Agent Mulder's "I Want to Believe" to the more rational "I Want to Understand", but Red Lights doesn't contribute any understanding. The status quo is the same at the end as at the beginning: Most paranormal phenomena have ordinary explanations, nearly all psychics and mediums are frauds, and people suffering physically or emotionally make easy marks. Every so often, something occurs that defies scientific analysis, but you won't find answers in a media circus.

[CSW] -3.6- The movie starts out pretty interesting at first with a couple of paranormal debunkers visiting the homes of different people experiencing odd goings ons and quickly leaving them in the dust upon recognizing their sham, snickering all the way home. Red Lights is deep into the atmosphere of the psychologist and physicist team of Paranormal debunkers as they attend a séance at a "haunted house." There are hoaxes and skeptics, yet the psychologist believes that something strange is going on. Her life's work has been involved in using science to disprove mediums, healers, and the like. Yet she wants to believe in an afterlife for reasons of her own. I am one of the fans of this supernatural/ thriller genre that enjoyed the mystery of this story, but at nearly two hours, it takes a long time for the secrets to be disclosed. The performances are solid, but the tension is drawn out. If you like mysteries and have the time this one is worth the effort.
[V4.0-A4.0] MPEG-4 AVC - No D-Box motion codes but D-Box intelligent vibration added greatly to this movie.

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