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Max winslow and the house of secrets
Max winslow and the house of secrets











max winslow and the house of secrets max winslow and the house of secrets

In this context, the final prize comes to feel less a reward and more like hush money for the horrible ordeal the characters have faced. However, this is all forgotten in the final act once the characters receive their rewards. There are moments when the film entertains a critique towards the role of technology in today’s society. The narrative is predictable and fails in its attempts to provide a strong moral message towards the end. It’s also unfortunate that the film fails to deliver on the secrets of its title. This is a real shame as the main appeal of this film promises to be the puzzles, and yet they all seem to fall flat. I won’t spoil any of the later puzzles, but they all suffer from being remarkably uninteresting death traps. The first puzzle sees them trapped inside a room ‘forever’ unless they can count a selection of gummy candies in order to obtain the door code. With each new puzzle, this family film increasingly resembles the Saw franchise, which I recognise is an incredibly bizarre comparison to make. What the puzzles lack in intricate design they make up for in lethality. There’s something hidden in the basement and each room promises to house puzzles-a-plenty, but it’s consequently disappointing when the puzzles and mysteries prove insubstantial. It is when the film maintains an air of mystery that it is most engaging. HAVEN is undeniably reminiscent of HAL from 2001: A Space Odyssey, and as such its presence certainly adds a creepy atmosphere to the film. HAVEN gives technological precedence to the ghostly occurrences of the house such as doors opening-or, more often, not opening. The mansion is controlled by an artificial intelligence that goes by the acronym HAVEN. The film also interestingly blends sci-fi with very light gothic horror, which provides some mystery at the opening. “As soon as we get to this place, we’re enemies” he says earnestly to his classmates on the ride to the mansion. My favourite instances were the moments when the bully, Aiden, channels his inner Violet Beauregarde and becomes intensely competitive. I enjoyed seeing the high schoolers’ personalities clash in predictable ways and this provided a fair number of laughs, although I’m not sure how many of these laughs were intentional. His aspiration to simply trade in one high school cliché for another might seem laughable, but it isn’t necessarily a flaw of the film, considering it is aimed at pre-teens. Early on in the film the jock of the group, Connor, reveals he’s not happy being ‘the lacrosse guy’-he’d much rather be ‘the music guy’. The characters themselves aren’t much more developed than their respective cliques, despite their wishes to be seen as more. As the title suggests, our hero is Max Winslow (Sydne Mikelle), a self-proclaimed hacker who is “like Neo from The Matrix except she’s from The Arkansas.” In the contest, she’s joined by a jock from the lacrosse team (Tanner Buchanan), the most popular girl in school (Jade Chynoweth), the school bully (Emery Kelly) and an obsessive gamer (Jason Genao).













Max winslow and the house of secrets