Searching (2018)

Searching (2018)

2018 PG-13 101 Minutes

Drama | Thriller

After his 16-year-old daughter goes missing, a desperate father breaks into her laptop to look for clues to find her. A thriller that unfolds entirely on computer screens.

Overall Rating

7 / 10
Verdict: Good

User Review

  • ScreenZealots

    ScreenZealots

    2 / 10
    “Searching” is being heralded as the ushering in as the birth of an exciting new narrative concept, but here’s hoping this filmmaking style quickly goes the way of the mumblecore genre. I sit at a computer monitor all day so the last thing I want to do when I escape to the world of cinema is sit and look at a computer screen for an additional two hours. The crime drama, set entirely on computer screens, has enough mysterious twists and turns to keep you mildly engaged but is far from the thriller it could’ve been.

    There are some legitimately effective scenes that deliver an emotional punch, the best being the beautiful, extended introductory set-up where we learn the family’s history from a shared montage of their online activity from their daughter’s birth to the death of a wife and mother. It’s almost impossible not to be emotionally invested in these characters and feel the agony along with David (John Cho) when he realizes his teenage daughter Margot (Michelle La) has gone missing. David aids a superstar detective (Debra Messing), in a clunky misstep of a performance) in the investigation by poring over Margot’s social media accounts to search for answers. The distraught dad slowly realizes how little he actually knew about his daughter.

    The storytelling device of using social media to solve a mystery is moderately engaging at first but quickly turns into a distracting gimmick that becomes stale. The entire film takes place on various electronic devices, from multiple computers to iPhones to hidden surveillance cameras. If watching as someone types a search query into Google is your idea of a good time, then you’ll love this movie.

    The most interesting themes aren’t amplified enough, like how truly scary it is that random strangers can find out a lot about you from your seemingly innocuous online activity and how most of us share far too many intimate details of our lives on social media without so much as a blink. The film takes a turn for the worst when it abandons all the compelling set ups and tosses them out the window in favor of a preposterous ending, an outrageous final reveal that, and there’s no sugar coating it here, is just plain dumb.

    Attentive viewers will notice little hints along the way that something’s up (check out Margot’s high school mascot, for instance), but the ending is altogether off-putting. The film is grossly condescending to its audience too, treating them like morons by hand holding everyone’s way through the mystery and the eventual crazy twist.

    Director Aneesh Chaganty for some reason feels the need to over-explain and repetitively state the obvious, from ridiculous news report narration to literally spelling out the big clues that eventually solve the crime. Perhaps he is bowing to average moviegoers who aren’t in the business of challenging themselves, but this movie has all the subtleties of a t.v. movie of the week.

    A SCREEN ZEALOTS REVIEW / Louisa Moore