Truth or Dare
Truth or Dare is about six friends known as
the Truth or Daredevils who achieve internet stardom by posting
“Truth or Dare” YouTube videos with violent twists. But when
their number one fan hijacks a show and decides to play by his own
rules, the fun and games come to an end as secrets are revealed and a
lot of blood is spilled. A LOT of blood.
The film largely takes place in a single
room and I quickly noticed the wonderful mix of dark and bright color
palettes on the walls. I found this to be a nice emphasis of the
coexistence of good and evil happening inside the room with the
presumably innocent 6 friends taken hostage by a deranged fan named
Derik, energetically played by Ryan Kiser. The contrasting colors
also echo the same sentiment that exists in the minds of men: the
blurring of secrets and truths that we all carry within us. The
hiding of secrets is demonstrated in full on cringe inducing, hard to
watch, gory fashion as Truth or Dare unfolds and the 6 friends are
opened up (in more ways than one) for everyone to see.
The performances are solid all around as the
actors have to portray endless expressions of disbelief and
excruciating pain. Ryan Kiser puts on a show that sometimes teeters
on the brink of being over the top but he has just enough
vulnerability on display to reel him in and he is overall very
effective in the role. Heather Dorff is the standout amongst the
YouTube group as she withers in pain and expertly displays pure raw
emotion in her eyes to match the expressions on her face.
The film makes a strong statement about
what's accepted as reality on the internet. Director Jessica Cameron
puts the themes of Truth or Dare on full, gory display as she
dismantles common beliefs and ideas and turns them inside out. The
unknown lives that are discovered amongst the group of friends who
thought they knew each other combined with Derik's thinking the
carnage is all part of the game says that perception is not reality
but, instead, reality is perception. The film says reality is decided
by the individual and how they choose to see it. And when reality has
several different interpretations, you're left with a fucked up mess
that exists outside the realm of known reality. And this is where the
more over the top sequences in the film are forgiven, because they
lay outside of a known reality; a place created by the fragility of
the human mind, it's instinct to protect itself, and it's dangerous
ability to escalate chaos.
That may seem a little deep for a gory film
about a bunch of YouTubers, but the script is very smart and
Cameron's direction shows that an unthinkable situation requires
unthinkable acts to happen within it. Even Kiser's Derik character
exclaims, “I didn't think that would work!” or acts surprised by
a few of the gory things that happen because of his doing. It's not
the reality any of them are used to. When all the truths have been
told and all the lies exposed, the mind goes to an unknown and dark
place, escalating the chaos as it tries to protect itself. And that's
Truth or Dare: an experiment in escalating chaos.
Bravo, Jessica Cameron.