Thursday, 6 June 2024

Sting (2024)

The main creature at the centre of Sting may actually be a small alien, but it looks like a spider, makes webbing, and generally triggers my arachnophobia, so I will be referring to it as another spider horror flick, coming along relatively hot on the heels of Infested.

Annoyingly starting with a sequence that shows some peril and the apparent fates of one or two characters, we then move back a few days to see how we got to that point. We got there thanks to a young girl named Charlotte (Alyla Browne). Charlotte finds a spider and decides to keep it as a pet. She feeds it, she learns that it can mimic certain sounds it hears, and she watches it get bigger in the jar. Things soon get out of control though, and when Sting, because that is what she has named it, is free and roaming around the building, Charlotte can’t imagine just how big and mean it is going to get.

Writer-director Kiah Roache-Turner has a lot of fun here. I have been a big fan of pretty much everything I have seen from him, and this is another success, albeit a low-key one. It’s not as effective as it could be, often missing major opportunities to make viewers skittish and uncomfortable, and it’s disappointingly tame for most of the runtime, but works brilliantly when it sets everything up to maximize the fun of the concept.

Roache-Turner knows exactly what he wants to do, and he starts the film off by filling up scenes with Chekhov’s Everything. The character details, the quirks of the building, the behaviour of the spider, viewers used to this kind of movie will know that almost everything is a set-up to some kind of pay-off, big or small, further down the line. And once everything is in place, it’s just a waiting game to see how much pain and death can be caused by the central creature.

Browne is a solid lead, likable enough to compensate for the stupidity of keeping a strange, potentially deadly, spider in a jar in her bedroom. Penelope Mitchell and Ryan Corr play her mother and step-father, respectively, with the latter more involved in the central storyline the tension in their relationship, and in the household. There are other people who may or may not end up in grave danger (played by Silvia Colloca, Noni Hazlehurst, Danny Kim, and Robyn Nevin), but the one who gets to make the most impact is Jermaine Fowler, playing a pest control guy about to be in way over his head. Fowler is fun, and it is obvious what film Roache-Turner is trying to emulate with his scenes, but his energy and humour would work better if the rest of the film was a bit darker and sharper.

I can understand people not liking this. It certainly isn’t great, and it’s generally far too predictable. I enjoyed it though. It did what I wanted it to do, even if I would have preferred some more blood and gore, and the pacing and set-pieces all show that it was made by someone with a real knowledge of, and love for, creature features. There’s still an even better modern spider horror to be made, in my opinion, but this is the better of the two recent ones, although most people seem to think otherwise.

7/10

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2 comments:

  1. Sting seems like a weird name for a spider. It would make sense for a bee/wasp/hornet but spiders are known more for biting than stinging.

    Apparently fly Joro spiders from Japan could soon be in my backyard as they move up from Georgia. It's said they're not dangerous to humans, but maybe if one mutates to giant size they would be.

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    1. I have already forgotten the exact detail, but young Charlotte is shown to be a fan of Tolkien, so the name comes from the sword given to our hobbit hero, as opposed to being specific to the spider.

      Good luck with the spiders. Eek!

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