Bug

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Critics' Reviews

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Movie Title
Avg. Score
Metascore
®
62
Generally favorable reviews
out of 100
'Bug' Goes to Extremes
By John Hartl, Film critic, MSNBC

William Friedkin's latest thriller, "Bug," has a clear advantage over most of the summer movies: it's not a sequel, a spinoff or any other kind of retread. Best of all, it doesn't tell you exactly where it's going until it's almost there.

On the other hand, what begins as a fairly naturalistic five-character drama eventually turns into a full-blown horror film filled with outrageous conspiracy theories, earthquake-like tremors and visions of an apocalypse that has been planned by evil politicians since 1954.

Long before it's over, you may feel more duped than provoked by Tracy Letts' screenplay, which is based on his off-Broadway play. After lulling you into accepting the characters as recognizable and understandable, the script suddenly takes them to extremes. Still, it's quite a ride if you can survive all of those treacherous curves.

The heroine, Agnes White (Ashley Judd), is a depressed, aging waitress whose options have become increasingly limited. Years before, she lost her 6-year-old son in what appears to have been a grocery-store kidnapping, and she's on the outs with her abusive, recently paroled ex-husband, Jerry (Harry Connick Jr.), who could be harrassing her with ominous phone calls.

She appears to be enthusiastically involved with a lesbian waitress, R.C. (Lynn Collins), as the movie opens. But she's more attracted to men, especially an asexual loner, Peter Evans (Michael Shannon), who says he wants only to be her friend. This sounds like the best offer she has, and she takes it. She has no idea how crazy their relationship will make her.

In the beginning, Friedkin's cameras hover almost randomly above the deteriorating motel room where Agnes lives — hinting, like the opening of Hitchcock's "Psycho," that they might land anywhere. There's something accidental about the selection the cameras make, yet there's also something inevitable about the connection Peter and Agnes make.

These opening scenes, which provide a strong sense of the environment the couple shares, are the most believable and cinematic episodes. But at some point "Bug" loses this quality and begins to feel like a filmed play. The characters stop revealing themselves and start making demands and issuing ultimatums.

The result is a hybrid, worth seeing mostly for the performances, which are consistently strong. Connick could be auditioning (successfully) for Stanley Kowalski in a remake of "A Streetcar Named Desire," while Shannon, who played this role on stage, is wonderfully still and spooky, like a 21st Century Norman Bates.

Judd, coming off a series of hugely commercial women-in-peril movies ("Kiss the Girls," "Double Jeopardy"), digs deep to discover the contradictions in Agnes, whose dilemma becomes increasingly poignant as she joins with Peter to face the abyss. At times, you can't help feeling that this is the role she was born to play.

First shown at last year's Cannes Film Festival, "Bug" is Friedkin's most watchable movie in years. He may be a long way from the glory days of "The Exorcist" and "The French Connection," which won him a best-director Oscar, but he still has a way with actors.

More movies on MSNBC 

William Friedkin's latest thriller, "Bug," has a clear advantage over most of the summer movies: it's not a sequel, a spinoff or any other kind of retread. Best of all, it doesn't tell you exactly where it's going until it's almost there.

On the other hand, what begins as a fairly naturalistic five-character drama eventually turns into a full-blown horror film filled with outrageous conspiracy theories, earthquake-like tremors and visions of an apocalypse that has been planned by evil politicians since 1954.

Long before it's over, you may feel more duped than provoked by Tracy Letts' screenplay, which is based on his off-Broadway play. After lulling you into accepting the characters as recognizable and understandable, the script suddenly takes them to extremes. Still, it's quite a ride if you can survive all of those treacherous curves.

The heroine, Agnes White (Ashley Judd), is a depressed, aging waitress whose options have become increasingly limited. Years before, she lost her 6-year-old son in what appears to have been a grocery-store kidnapping, and she's on the outs with her abusive, recently paroled ex-husband, Jerry (Harry Connick Jr.), who could be harrassing her with ominous phone calls.

She appears to be enthusiastically involved with a lesbian waitress, R.C. (Lynn Collins), as the movie opens. But she's more attracted to men, especially an asexual loner, Peter Evans (Michael Shannon), who says he wants only to be her friend. This sounds like the best offer she has, and she takes it. She has no idea how crazy their relationship will make her.

In the beginning, Friedkin's cameras hover almost randomly above the deteriorating motel room where Agnes lives — hinting, like the opening of Hitchcock's "Psycho," that they might land anywhere. There's something accidental about the selection the cameras make, yet there's also something inevitable about the connection Peter and Agnes make.

These opening scenes, which provide a strong sense of the environment the couple shares, are the most believable and cinematic episodes. But at some point "Bug" loses this quality and begins to feel like a filmed play. The characters stop revealing themselves and start making demands and issuing ultimatums.

The result is a hybrid, worth seeing mostly for the performances, which are consistently strong. Connick could be auditioning (successfully) for Stanley Kowalski in a remake of "A Streetcar Named Desire," while Shannon, who played this role on stage, is wonderfully still and spooky, like a 21st Century Norman Bates.

Judd, coming off a series of hugely commercial women-in-peril movies ("Kiss the Girls," "Double Jeopardy"), digs deep to discover the contradictions in Agnes, whose dilemma becomes increasingly poignant as she joins with Peter to face the abyss. At times, you can't help feeling that this is the role she was born to play.

First shown at last year's Cannes Film Festival, "Bug" is Friedkin's most watchable movie in years. He may be a long way from the glory days of "The Exorcist" and "The French Connection," which won him a best-director Oscar, but he still has a way with actors.

More movies on MSNBC 

88
CHICAGO SUN-TIMES: Roger Ebert
Begins as an ominous rumble of unease, and builds to a shriek. The last 20 minutes are searingly intense: A paranoid personality finds its mate, and they race each other into madness.Read Full Review »
88
Boston Globe: Wesley Morris
Engrossingly manic version of Tracy Letts's great stage play.Read Full Review »
83
ENTERTAINMENT WEEKLY: Lisa Schwarzbaum
The enjoyably icky heart of Bug is still contained within the airless, increasingly ''bug-proofed'' room that becomes Agnes and Peter's whole world.Read Full Review »
75
Philadelphia Inquirer: Tirdad Derakhshani
After nearly three decades of misfires, major and minor, William Friedkin, the creator of "The French Connection," "The Exorcist" and "Sorcerer," is back in true form with Bug. And heaven help us for it.Read Full Review »
70
The New York Times: Jeannette Catsoulis
The escalating hysteria and grisly set pieces of Bug may strain credulity, but Ms. Judd has never been more believable as a woman condemned to attract the wrong kind of man.Read Full Review »
70
Washington Post: Desson Thomson
We find ourselves in the fascinating no man's land between horror and comedy -- right where this movie wants us to be.Read Full Review »
70
Village Voice: Rob Nelson
Genuinely freaky-deaky, not to mention more inventively unsettling than anything Friedkin has mustered in the quarter-century since twisting little Linda Blair into a satanic spewer of pea soup and F-bombs.Read Full Review »
70
Slate: Dana Stevens
It's unapologetically theatrical.Read Full Review »
63
ReelViews: James Berardinelli
Bug is creepy and hard to dismiss, but it's not a lot of fun and its weaknesses leave a bitter aftertaste.Read Full Review »
50
LOS ANGELES TIMES: Carina Chocano
Creepy and unsettling, to say nothing of gory, but overall it's a little claustrophobic and uneven.Read Full Review »
See all Bug reviews at metacritic.com »