After suffering a potentially career-ending brain trauma, Cameron Cade receives a lifeline when his hero, legendary eight-time Championship quarterback and cultural megastar Isaiah White, offers to train Cam at Isaiah's isolated compound that he shares with his celebrity influencer wife. But as Cam's training accelerates, Isaiah's charisma begins to curdle into something darker.
ritual cult training religion psychotic injury quarterback athletics satanic blood horror pessimistic sport football combine
Nežinomas naudotojas paraÅ”Ä atsiliepimÄ apie HIM (2025)
HIM
Producer-writer-director Jordan Peele has quickly developed quite a reputation for making horror flicks/psychological thrillers that undeniably push the envelope of these genres, turning out creations unlike anything most moviegoers have ever seen. In the process, he has often packed his pictures with much for viewers to process on multiple levels as they walk out of the theater. And, in his latest offering, in which Peele has acted as producer, handing over the writing and directing responsibilities to filmmaker Justin Tipping, he has overseen the birth of yet another release in the same vein as previous projects like āGet Outā (2017), āUsā (2019) and āNopeā (2022) ā only this time on steroids and laced with a touch of crack. āHimā tells the story of Cameron Cade (Tyriq Withers), a pro football prospect whoās looked upon by many as the sportās next quarterback G.O.A.T. (i.e., āgreatest of all timeā). His future looks bright until he experiences a baffling yet devastating head injury at the hands of disturbed fan teetering on the edge of sanity. So, in an effort to reinvigorate his skills (and to rejuvenate his career), he agrees to be taken under the wing of veteran hurler Isaiah White (Marlon Wayans), a QB who led his team to eight championships but is now on the fence about retirement. When the recovering protĆ©gĆ© begins his mentorship under the sports legend, however, he gets much more than he bargained for. He enters a world in which he becomes ensconced in a dizzying mix of hyper-ambition, psychological gamesmanship, professional jealousy and an aberrant culture that gleefully and relentlessly celebrates mind-numbing brutality. Given Camās precarious mental state in the wake of his injury, combined with an onslaught of conflicting messages, mind games and bizarre occurrences that straddle the borders of reality, he struggles to make sense of it all, particularly when it comes to deciding whether to embrace or abandon the world of which heās about to become a part. His existence turns surreal, confusing, and, above all, troubling. He has some big decisions to make, provided if heās even capable of thinking straight at this point. But the film is about more than just Camās struggle to hold on to his sanity in the face of his mentorās malevolence, gaslighting and questionable motives; itās also a strong statement about the bloodsport culture of football and the ways in which society has come to worship it as something akin to a perverse religious cult. In fact, the narrative is riddled with ominous Biblical and Satanic symbolism, elements that have been suitably tweaked to reflect the nature of the world of pro football and the exalted position itās been accorded in contemporary society. Yet, curiously enough, in making its case, the film tells a tale that alternates between being deadly serious with its troubling imagery and not taking itself seriously at all with its astutely timed sinister comic relief, walking a precarious tightrope of moods that keeps viewers guessing about whatās really going on here. In the process, it provides a perfect showcase for Wayans to show off acting chops that most of us probably never knew he possessed; his ability to switch gears and turn on a dime and make it look effortless is truly impressive. Add to those qualities the filmās breakneck pacing, edgy film editing, stunning visuals and eclectic production design, and youāve got a cinematic rollercoaster thatās sure to leave you exhilarated, exhausted and unnerved by the time the credits roll. Now, this is not to suggest that the film is without problems. The narrative is excessively overstuffed and somewhat unfocused at times (no doubt to try and convey what itās like to be in Camās head under these circumstances), and its various messages can be more than a little obvious and heavy-handed on occasion. However, even if āHimā is not perfect, Tipping and Peele should be commended for trying to breathe new life into a genre thatās been releasing a steady stream of lame, half-baked offerings of late, and Iāll take this offering over any of its underwhelming wannabe peers any day of the week.