‘Caddo Lake’ Review: M. Night Shyamalan Produces Paranormal Thriller With Dylan O’Brien And Eliza Scanlen Caught Up In Head-Scratching Family Mystery

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M. Night Shyamalan has certainly been busy this year pushing out his signature brand of twisty thrillers. So far in 2024 we have had his daughter’s directorial effort, The Watchers which he produced, the intriguing modest hit Trap which stars another daughter and which he directed and produced, and now Caddo Lake which is being heavily advertised as from “Producer M. Night Shyamalan” and unmistakably fits right into his own filmography even if he turned over writing and directing reins to the team of Celine Held and Logan George. Set for a streaming debut on Max starting Thursday rather than going theatrical like the rest of his feature output, Shyamalan has accomplished all this current activity while still heavily involved in his ongoing Apple TV+ series, Servant which also happens to be a key credit for his filmmakers here.

Actually this one went into production exactly three years ago under the title The Vanishing At Caddo Lake, but now as it is finally coming to market that title has been shortened since the original probably gives too much away. Shyamalan is notorious for trying to keep the twists and turns in his plots top secret, and this film lives or dies on not knowing much going in, a bit of a hindrance in staying with the convoluted machinations of its dueling storylines in order to finally get the meat and bones of it all. Max in fact supplies no press notes but instead a one sheet for reviewers warning them not to reveal a host of points around several of the characters, even the period in which it is set. Reading that proves just as complicated as the script.

All that said, this is indeed the baby of Held and George who became fascinated with the actual Caddo Lake situated on the border between Texas and Louisiana, and you can see why since it is every bit as spooky and atmospheric as the setting in Cape Fear, and provides the perfect locale for a mystery. Still it takes a while to get to all that. The story focuses most on a couple of the characters living in the area. One of them is Paris (Dylan O’Brien) who is fixated on the tragic death of his mother due to a car crash into the lake, something he seems completely obsessed in solving for himself, trying to tie his mother’s seizures into a bigger mystery. On another track we meet Ellie (Eliza Scanlen), a spirited teen who is distraught over the disappearance of her father, in a tense relationship with her mother Celeste (Lauren Ambrose), and idolized by her 8 year old stepsister Anna (Caroline Falk). Ellie just wants to get out of this place and is often seen on the lake navigating her motorboat. Trying to keep the peace in the family is her stepfather Daniel (Eric Lange). When Anna, on her own, bolts out into the lake like her older stepsister does, she goes missing and everyone sets out on a search for her, one that will eventually uncover more than anyone bargained for – the characters in this movie and the audience watching them.

Beware as this is where all the twists and turns come into play, the paranormal sci-fi elements of Held’s and George’s screenplay, and clearly the plot progression that intrigued Shyamalan enough to throw his money and production company, Blinding Edge into making it. There are some false clues along the way, even a suggestion there are very sinister forces lurking in the lake, but it is far more complicated and, well, contrived than what meets the eye. Where it all comes to life is with Scanlen’s determination to get beneath the mystery with a belief this is much more than just about a missing 8 year old.

You do have to suspend disbelief here, even when some of it doesn’t appear to add up, but Held and George prove unquestionably to be a very promising and skilled filmmaking team with sharp direction overcoming some of the less compelling aspects of their screenplay. And fortuanately they have a dedicated cast led by Scanlen who worked with Shyamalan in the even more convoluted 2021 Old, and here gives us a true rooting interest and anchor. O’Brien (Teen Wolf, The Maze Runner) gives it his all with an earnest performance that requires a tortured look for most of the running time. Ambrose is also quite fine here, as is young Falk and Lange, the latter with quite a tricky role to pull off. A real star player though is the Lowell A, Meyer whose lush cinematography sets the scene beautifully.

Perhaps the real mystery here is why it has taken three years to get this in front of audiences as it is on a par with much of what Shyamalan puts his name on, and due to the skill of these filmmakers takes a ludicrous family story and makes it work for those who are susceptible for this kind of twisty ride and who want to invest the time for its ultimate emotional payoff.

Title: Caddo Lake

Distributor: Max Original; New Line Cinema

Release Date: October 10, 2024 (streaming on MAX)

Director/Screenplay: Celine Held and Logan George

Cast: Dylan O’Brien, Eliza Scanlen, Lauren Ambrose, Caroline Falk, Eric Lange, Sam Hennings, Diana Hopper

Rating: PG13

Running Time: 1 hour and 39 minutes

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