By Michelle Nichols

http://www.reuters.com/article/filmNews/idUSN1146617320080611?pageNumber=2&v
irtualBrandChannel=0

NEW YORK (Reuters) - Director M. Night Shyamalan is best known for the
Oscar-nominated global hit "The Sixth Sense," but fans should be under no
illusions about his latest thriller, "The Happening."

"I wanted it to be a fantastic, fun B-movie," Shyamalan told Reuters in a
recent interview about the eighth film he has written and directed. "The No.
1 thing is I want people to say: 'That was a really fun B-movie.'"

After his 2006 flop "Lady In the Water," which was slammed by critics and
grossed just $73 million at the box office worldwide, some critics say the
pressure is on the 37-year-old Indian-born American, so he has returned to
what he does best -- scaring people.

His two previous "scary" movies, 1999's "The Sixth Sense" starring Bruce
Willis and 2002's "Signs" starring Mel Gibson, made more than $1.7 billion
globally between them. But analysts are puzzled as to how "The Happening"
will do when it opens around the world this week.

"His box office record has been all over the map, but he's held to such a
high standard because of how well 'The Sixth Sense' did," said Paul
Dergarabedian, box office analyst for Media By Numbers.

"I don't think this is going to be 'Lady in the Water,'" he said. "This is
definitely going to be a stronger opening then that. The marketing has been
pretty strong, and audiences are always intrigued by M. Night Shyamalan."

Brandon Gray, president of movie Web site Box Office Mojo, agreed. But he
added that because Shyamalan is promoted as a key selling point -- his name
appears above the title on movie posters -- a box office failure is more
harmful to him.

"Even though 'Lady in the Water' is by no means the greatest flop ever and
'The Village' did a lot of business, it just disappointed a lot of people,"
Gray said.

"The Happening," starring Mark Wahlberg and Zooey Deschanel, sees an
invisible killer spread throughout the U.S. Northeast, leaving people asking
if it is a terrorist attack, a government conspiracy or an unexplainable act
of nature.

"There's so many things to be paranoid about right now," said Shyamalan,
adding he wanted to play on people's fears for the future about such things
as terrorism and climate change. "I was so clear about what kind of movie I
was making."

After seeing the movie, Shyamalan hopes audiences will nervously wonder if
"that could really happen" and maybe even feel guilty about how they might
be harming the planet.

But early reviews have panned the 20th Century Fox film.

"The movie seems more like a '50s science-fiction film of extreme paranoia
or an episode of 'The Twilight Zone' that even at a swiftly paced 90 minutes
feels padded," The Hollywood Reporter's Kirk Honeycutt wrote.

Variety's Justin Chang wrote: "After an initial bloom of interest, the Fox
release will likely wilt quickly."

Reuters/Nielsen

 



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