Last fall the internet witnessed a rare phenomenon: the meteoric, memeified rise of a brand new star, catapulted into mononymic ubiquity thanks to a single two and-a-half minute movie trailer.
But M3GAN isn’t your average girl – she’s a lifelike, powerful robotic doll equipped with machine-learning capabilities that makes a Tamagotchi look like child’s play.
The Terminator in an Annabelle wig, Chucky by way of The Bad Seed, or the nasty little sister of Ex Machina's Ava, M3GAN is equipped with a searing side-eye and snappy clapbacks. You can run, but you definitely can’t hide, so say hello to your newest horror movie obsession (and be prepared for the ensuing Halloween costumes), in the delightfully bonkers M3GAN from James Wan and Akela Cooper, the minds behind the delightfully bonkers Malignant.
Gerard Johnstone is the director, and he smartly delivers Wan and Cooper’s script with treatment it deserves, as a straightforward horror flick that doesn’t blink while simultaneously jabbing the audience in the ribs. M3GAN more often than not, and indeed, right away, is a comedy before it’s a horror movie, opening with a guffaw, teasing the audience with a laugh before a jarring smash to violence and trauma.
The unique tone is anchored by star Allison Williams, who has surprisingly become one of our best horror leading ladies, bringing her signature brand of eerie camp to such films as Get Out, The Perfection, and now M3GAN. Williams’ skillful intentional affectlessness renders her characters slippery, difficult to pin down into preordained binaries of good and evil.
In M3GAN, Williams is a Dr. Frankenstein type, playing Gemma, a toy designer with a savant-like skill for robotics. She’s toiling over a Purrpetual Petz prototype for her demanding boss at Funki Toys, David (a superb Ronny Chieng), when she receives the call that her sister and brother-in-law have died in an accident and she’s to assume guardianship of her niece, Cady (Violet McGraw).
Career-oriented Gemma isn’t quite sure how to connect with a kid, and so she revives her scrapped project, M3GAN (played physically by Amie Donald and voiced by Jenna Davis) as a sort of pal for her lonely, grieving niece.
It’s alive! And she’s spectacular, especially according to Cady, who quickly grows fond of the attentive M3GAN once they imprint on each other. Gemma rushes M3GAN and Cady into a demo for David, and while blithely ignoring warnings from Cady’s therapist about potential attachment issues, Gemma and Funki are soon planning an announcement to the public about the high-tech, high-dollar toy that just might replace actual parenting.
But neither M3GAN nor Cady like to share their toys, and M3GAN’s “learning protocol” is far more advanced, and unregulated, than Gemma anticipates.
M3GAN plays on the ideas that are brought up time and time again in techno horror – about our over-reliance on and misplaced trust in machines and technology, whether or not they move or speak with echoes of humanity.
But M3GAN also introduces a new element to the mix: parenting horror. What kind of “learning protocols” are parents implanting in impressionable beings without fully understanding themselves?
The jump-scares in the fun, funny thrill ride that is M3GAN elicit more giggles than groans, but there are also intriguing connections being made on M3GAN’s motherboard, behind the glossy surface.
f HAL 9000 could see M3GAN – and her dance moves – now, he’d indeed be proud, and M3GAN has more than earned your trip to the theatre, and her status in the meme folder. – Review by Katie Walsh/ Tribune News Service
Summary:
Say hello to your newest horror movie obsession.