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Apt Pupil (1998)

Apt Pupil
"Whaddaya mean I look Jewy? What's wrong with that?"

Starring:

Ian Mckellen
Brad Renfro

Released By:

Columbia Tri-Star

Released In:

1998

Rated:

R

Reviewed By:

Adam Mast

Grade:

B-

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Horror scribe Stephen King has been churning out novel after novel for years. It seems that the majority of his translations to the big screen have been less than exciting. On the low end of the spectrum we have films such as Maximum Overdrive, Graveyard Shift, Thinner and The Tommyknockers. On the high end we have The Shawshank Redemption, Stand By Me, Misery and The Dead Zone. There was also a little film called The Shining, although many, myself included, will argue that The Shining became director Stanley Kubrick's personal version.

Enter Apt Pupil, a film that lies somewhere in the middle. This new psychological thriller from Usual Suspects director, Bryan Singer, has a lot going for it, but doesn't rank among King's best. It does, however, manage to stay a safe distance from being one of the worst. Brad Renfro (The Client) plays a high school honor student obsessed with the Holocaust. When he discovers that a local senior citizen, played by Ian Mckellen, is a Nazi war criminal, he decides to give himself a higher education.

The dark bond between the two is what really gives this film it's kick. Watching them continually try to outwit each other is something I don't recall seeing before. It is also a story about power - how to obtain and use it. But most of all, it's about a monster that is reborn, a recurrent theme in King's work.

As expected, Apt Pupil is shot with a lot of visual flair and features stellar editing.
The biggest problem is the standard horror cliches that appear towards the film's end. Also, Renfro starts off very effective, but overacts as the film progresses. All in all, it's not a step in the right direction for Bryan Singer. This is one directing genius who should set his sights a little higher.

:: zBoneman.com Reader Comments ::

stacey peckover

stacey peckover

Apt Pupil gives an inside view of the human nature. The close relationship between curiosity and subconcious evil. Genuinely Honest, and this is why we do not appreciate such films. We wish to be bubble wrap coated. It makes us feel uncomfortable when we truly realize that the game of life we know, has a dark side to the bright sun. We sleep at night.

Dialated Pupils

Dialated Pupils

Apt Pupil was an effective film for several different reasons. Number one it drove home the fact that we're still not so much as being seperatied from the Holocaust by a generation. Two that the lure and power of fame is one of the strongest human motivators and Three it proved that even a man of advanced years can use the seductive power of Satan - it knows no age barriers.

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