The Boogeyman review – deftly made yet derivative Stephen King horror (2024)

The creative constraints of the early Covid era, forcing writers and directors to maximise the minimalism of remote production, led to an inevitable and seemingly inexorable dip in quality. Stories were told on laptops or phones or both at a time when most of us wanted to escape the exhaustion of life lived on a screen, not embrace it, the overwhelming majority offering nothing more than a depressing reminder of how incredibly small our world had suddenly become.

But fresh young British director Rob Savage, using the same base tools as his far more experienced peers, found a way to turn our eyerolls into wide-eyed admiration with his ingeniously effective horror Host. Based entirely on Zoom, it told the story of group of friends who decide to do a guided seance online, and while not a single viewer will be surprised about how this turns out to be a very, very bad idea, the ways in which it descends into chaos do prove at times genuinely unexpected. It was an imperfect film but a perfect calling card, showing how much Savage can do with so little. While his rushed follow-up Dashcam was a total, at times embarrassing, bust – messy and saddled with a wildly grating lead – his closely followed Hollywood debut still arrives with more expectation than most studio horrors despite the conventional packaging.

Based on a lesser-known Stephen King short story and lumped with a title so generic it’s already been used countless times before, The Boogeyman fits into current horror trends a little too perfectly. It’s a female-led tale of grief and trauma, to be filed near 2021’s Antlers and last year’s Men and even closer to the similarly dour and metaphor-heavy Smile. Like that film it was also originally planned to be a streaming premiere but test screenings pushed it from Hulu to the big screen, which makes sense, both commercially and aesthetically, the film at least looking and breathing like the real thing.

Savage does far more than the disappointingly rote script, from A Quiet Place duo Scott Beck and Bryan Woods, deserves, as do his performers, all trying their best to distract us from the story’s grinding anonymity. It’s focused on a family, still grieving the loss of the matriarch, two daughters (Yellowjackets’ Sophie Thatcher and Bird Box’s Vivien Lyra Blair) and their therapist father (Chris Messina). When a stranger enters their home and kills himself, a new form of darkness descends, one that seems to feed off their pain. The evil that attaches itself to the family is handled with as little detail and distinctiveness as the grief that attracts it, both painted in the broadest of strokes (“I keep expecting her to walk through the door” is one of many lumberingly familiar lines). The specifics of the creature and how it operates are just too derivative for the film to ever truly escape from the shadows, predictably recycling beat after beat, almost as if it were one long game of guessing which element came from which film before it.

There are successful moments within, mostly thanks to Savage finding unique ways to frame scenes we’ve otherwise seen before. I’m not sure if anything comes close to the level of nightmare the film wants to inspire but in a film of otherwise repetitious set pieces playing with light and dark, his insistence on upending our visual expectations often pays off handsomely. Savage’s knack for atmosphere is also complemented by his skilled troupe of actors – Messina doing concerned, Thatcher doing imperiled and Blair doing terrified all very effectively – and they work hard to make the film’s heart beat (there’s also a small, nasty turn from Marin Ireland, having quite the gruelling year of it after cropping up in various states of grubby disrepair in Sundance thrillers Eileen and Birth/Rebirth). What Savage struggles with most, and this is a problem shared with his writers, is a coherent sense of place. Too often we’re left questioning the layout of the house and the whereabouts of those inside it – how could this happen here or why is no one hearing this happen there – and while it might sound like a relatively minor complaint, suspense is frequently killed by confusion (Messina’s character is absent for such a long stretch, I wondered if I’d missed something). It’s needlessly sloppy for a film that otherwise looks so impressive.

Outside of Savage’s visual verve, there’s really little else to The Boogeyman, its attempt to use its central villain as a metaphor for emotional trauma never working quite as well as it did in last year’s Smile (horror as therapy is getting a tad exhausting in general). It ultimately works best as further proof of his ability as a genre film-maker, sleekly gliding from a laptop to the big screen, better things to surely come.

  • The Boogeyman is out in US and UK cinemas on 2 June

The Boogeyman review – deftly made yet derivative Stephen King horror (2024)

FAQs

What is The Boogeyman based off of? ›

The Boogeyman Movie Is Based on a Stephen King Story

King's original short story, also titled "The Boogeyman," came out in the '70s. King's story can be read in his first collection of shorts: Night Shift.

Is Boogeyman worth watching? ›

The Boogeyman might fall short of its terrifying source material, but a spooky atmosphere and some solid performances help keep the chills coming. If you don't mind spending a lot of time waiting for things to happen, The Boogeyman is worth watching for some solid jump scares.

What did Stephen King say about The Boogeyman movie? ›

Stephen King had been supportive of the project from its inception – he's a fan of Host and Dashcam, and when he read the script of The Boogeyman, he called it "terrific" – but showing him a cut is an aptly terrifying experience.

How scary is the new Boogeyman movie? ›

The film is off to a very creepy start, and the creepiness never lets go. This film is relentless, as it never allows the viewer to take a breath. It grabs you from the opening scene and completely reels you in, only to let go after the finale. Sadie (Sophie Thatcher) recently lost her mom in a car accident.

What is the point of The Boogeyman? ›

The large majority of bogeymen just function to frighten children with potential punishments, and not actually to inflict much damage. The more vicious bogeyman is said to steal the children at night, and even to eat them, or to commit some other violence.

What Stephen King book is The Boogeyman movie based on? ›

Taken directly from the pages of King's exquisite 1978 debut short story collection, Night Shift, "The Boogeyman" tells the story of one of the most loathsome characters (I don't say that lightly,) I've ever come across, as he and his wife, Rita, are afflicted with any parent's worst nightmare.

Is The Boogeyman movie demonic? ›

The Boogeyman turns out to be a real demonic force. The demon threatens the ones he loves, so Tim decides to take action. BOOGEYMAN the movie is filled with scary scenes and scary supernatural encounters with the demonic title character.

Why is Boogeyman rated R? ›

The MPAA gave The Boogeyman a PG-13 rating for terror, violent content, teen drug use and some strong language. As with all horror films, there are scary elements. A big part of The Boogeyman's eeriness stems from the terrifying nature of the titular creature.

What does the ending of The Boogeyman mean? ›

The Boogeyman's Ending Real Meaning Explained

Despite Sadie and her family getting to a much better place, with Will openly talking about the loss of his wife and The Boogeyman seemingly dying in physical form, the film suggests that grief will continue to be prevalent in one's life no matter how much time has passed.

What movie could Stephen King not sit through? ›

"Halfway through it, I said 'turn it off, it's too freaky'." The film in question is the 1999 cult classic The Blair Witch Project.

What is the scariest creature in Stephen King? ›

Stephen King: 10 Best Supernatural Villains
  • Pennywise the Clown isn't the only monster you need to fear at night. ...
  • Now, Gage is back with the most ancient of curses coursing where blood once flowed. ...
  • The Raggedy Man. ...
  • Kurt Barlow.

What's considered the scariest movie ever? ›

15 Scariest Horror Movies of All Time, According to Rotten...
  • 8 Get Out (2017)
  • 7 The Babadook.
  • 6 Alien (1979)
  • 5 Jaws (1975)
  • 4 Psycho (1960)
  • 3 The Conjuring (2013)
  • 2 Hereditary (2018)
  • 1 The Exorcist (1973)
Dec 28, 2023

What's the scariest horror movie known to man? ›

The 10 Scariest Horror Movies Ever
  • The Exorcist (1973)
  • Hereditary (2018)
  • The Conjuring (2013)
  • The Shining (1980)
  • The Texas Chainsaw Massacre (1974)
  • The Ring (2002)
  • Halloween (1978)
Sep 30, 2022

How gory is The Boogeyman? ›

Violence & Gore (6)

Occasional moderate sene of threat throughout related to a mysterious creature that stalks a teenage girl and her grief-striken family. Brief sustained attacks involving stabbings and death of children include blood spatter and the use of guns or flame-throwing devices to combat the creature.

What is the origin of the bogeyman? ›

Creation of the bogeyman

The word bogeyman, used to describe a monster in English, comes from the Middle English bugge or bogge, which means “a frightening spectre.” Bogeyman itself is known from the 15th century, though bogeyman stories are almost certainly much older.

Who was the real Boogeyman in real life? ›

Albert Fish

What is The Boogeyman legend story? ›

In America, Bogeyman urban legends describe him as a scary figure with no consistent shape or form. He hides under the bed, in dark corners, or in a child's closet waiting for his prey. In other countries, he's a man who wears all black with a sack and kidnaps bad children to either keep them or eat them.

What is chasing the boogeyman based on? ›

There was actually an intruder in the author's childhood town that would enter people's houses and watch them sleep and steal articles of intimate clothing, but he was never caught; based on that, Richard Chizmar created the boogeyman killer for the book, while maintaining the home intruder in the story, as one of the ...

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