Review:
These American remakes of Asian horror can almost be classified as a subgenre, now that films such as “Pulse” have come full circle. Following the horror tropes left behind by the “Poltergeist” franchise but basing its fundamental premise on Kiyoshi Kurosawa’s exemplary 2001 cult hit "Kairo", it merges the prevalence of technology in our daily lives with the netherworld’s relentless agenda of world domination…or something to that effect. There’s something really interesting about the inclusion of the afterlife in our fulsome technological pursuits, something quite profound even. But where “Kairo” tried to stymie a tidied explanation and aimed at a persuasive sense of lament and melancholy in a steadily paced atmosphere of dread and cultural isolation, “Pulse” loses that very provocative sentiment and goes straight for the kill.
Horror master Wes Craven pens this update, situating students in a struggle to survive a sinister force using the advancement in cybernetics against them. Even “White Noise” and “Fear Dot Com”, in all their crapular glory had interesting premises behind them. Regrettably, “Pulse” joins the ranks of films with potentially creepy ideas that don’t come into fruition. And for a film so entrenched in technological references, there seems to be plenty of illogical setups when using these equipments. Early shots include a deluge of students using mobile devices, text messaging each other while using their laptops, all to make a point - we use too much technology. All while the film reaches to the extremes in listing problems associated with online dependence. Wow. A virus attack sends more shivers down my spine than “Pulse” ever could.
It provokes technophobia when the film goes onboard a Luddite-esque, Y2K scare bandwagon by dramatically expositing the social (and physical) terrors of online and mobile communication. While “Kairo” slowly sucked the viewer in, and silently critiqued against technology’s gradual predominance in our cultural attitudes, “Pulse” shouts it from the rafters while unimaginatively explicating its dangers even till the end. It voices out its concerns and caveats over online piracy, inter-personal relationships and the increasing accessibility of choosing instant messaging over face-to-face communication.............
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