Teenagers acquire super powers and, being teenagers, videotape themselves as they learn what they can do in Chronicle, an entertaining comic-book movie without the comic book.
Featuring effects that put the last two Spider-Man movies to shame, engaging, believable characters and a kind of real-teens/real-problems melodramatic screenplay, this makes an entertaining exercise in that childs game, What would YOU do if you had super powers?
You know that virginal, nerdy, downtrodden Andrew (Dane DeHaan) is going to address every tormentor and every torment (the sex thing) once hes wandered down that crater and touched the magic, pulsating crystals. His cerebral, Jung-and-Schopenhauer-quoting cousin, Matt (Alex Russell), will get to test out what hes read about humans as beings of pure will. And Steve (Michael B. Jordan), the popular kid, will find something to do with his new skills in telekinesis.
The clever conceit here is that each boy already has the emotional issues or personality that will inform how he handles great, seemingly unlimited power. They can goof around, figuring out who can take a smack from a baseball and who can master flying first. But when teenagers do what teenagers do act impulsively some will handle the ugly consequences better than others.
The young actors are charismatic, sympathetic and charming. The flying effects are first-rate, a marvelous next-generation version of something weve seen done reasonably well since Superman. This film strips that Spider-Man animation away and shows us human beings frolicking in the clouds convincingly.
But the script by director Josh Trank and Max Landis sets us up for obvious payoffs, and then trips us up. Even when it follows a predictable path, it takes detours.
That makes Chronicle a semi-serious sci-fi romp, lighter and more fun than many of the comic-book movies that it steals from, a superhero movie in which nobody ever crusades, or wears a cape.













