Extremely Wicked, Shockingly Evil And Vile
I’ll always root for
Zac but he needs to get his
Head back in the game.
When the trailer for “Extremely Wicked, Shockingly Evil and Vile” did its rounds on the Internet, I was instantly hooked. It’s got everything a trailer should have: an assuredly riveting court case, Zac Efron being Zac Efron, and even John Malkovich uttering the movie’s titular phrase. Unfortunately, “Extremely Wicked” is one movie that doesn’t live up to the promise of its trailer. As a form of entertainment, one might say it is extremely average, shockingly dull and disjointed.
I went into “Extremely Wicked” with high hopes, but I pretty much knew I was in trouble from the get-go. The movie opens with scenes that cut back and forth between ex-girlfriend Elizabeth Kloepfer (Lily Collins) visiting Ted Bundy (Efron) in jail and the night they first met at a bar. All the sudden it’s the next morning, and Bundy is already comfortable enough in Kloepfer’s home to cook her breakfast and feed her toddler, all before she wakes up. Then, we get a montage of home movies featuring Bundy, Kloepfer and her daughter, who has aged significantly, all while news sound bites report on Bundy’s crimes. I understand the intention of this juxtaposition, but the effort is a bit too on-the-nose to be very chilling. Right after the montage, we jump to Bundy cruising through and getting pulled over in Utah. All of this, and we’re still in the first eight minutes of the movie. Yikes.
Aside from the extreme tonal inconsistencies that resulted, I didn’t like how the movie jumped all over the place because it assumed that we already know Bundy’s story and the players in it, which I didn’t and still really don’t. People weren’t introduced and situations weren’t explained, and it felt like this movie started at another, better movie’s 20-minute mark. I don’t need shit spoon-fed to me, but sometimes a little exposition at the beginning of a movie can go a long away.
Now, I love Zac Efron and think he was perfectly cast for this role, but the only thing extremely wicked and shockingly vile about this movie’s script is its gross underutilization of his dark side. Efron has been a charmer since he first came on the scene as the starting point guard of the East High Wildcats, so of course he nails that side of Bundy – I just wish he had been given more opportunities to play the menacing side. We never really get to see Bundy’s violent tendencies, and my friend Daniel claims this is intentional since it has the effect of making Bundy easy to root for in the same way that people rooted for him in real life. And that makes sense, but the movie suffers because of it. What could have been a terrifying thriller is instead reduced to something far more procedural and lackluster. And that’s a real shame, because there’s a good movie in here somewhere. Its writers just didn’t dig deep enough.