The Movie Waffler New Release Review - OPUS | The Movie Waffler

New Release Review - OPUS

young journalist is invited to a remote retreat to witness the return of a pop star who disappeared 30 years earlier.

Review by Eric Hillis

Directed by: Mark Anthony Green

Starring: Ayo Edibiri, John Malkovich, Rosario Dawson, Juliette Lewis, Murray Bartlett, Amber Midthunder, Young Mazino, Stephanie Suganami, Tony Hale


GQ editor turned writer/director Mark Anthony Green's debut Opus is the latest in a growing line of Wonkabes, movies that take their setup from Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory. In such movies (Saw, Escape Room, The Menu), a group of people are lured to the lair of an eccentric madman and brutally punished for their perceived sins. The group usually features one innocent party, the Charlie, for whom the Wonka surrogate has other plans.


Opus might be the most blatant Wonkabe we've seen so far. The Wonka stand-in here is Alfred Moretti (John Malkovich). In the '90s Moretti was the world's biggest pop star before he retired at the end of that decade, never to be seen again. The Charlie is Ariel (Ayo Edibiri), a struggling young writer at what must be one of the world's last surviving music publications. Taken for granted and often overlooked at work, Charlie is shocked when Moretti announces the release of his first album in three decades and invites her to be part of an exclusive group that will attend his album launch at his secluded desert compound. It's often joked that Charlie's Grandpa Joe is an unscrupulous old codger who leeches off his grandson, and Opus almost seems to play on this idea by positing Ariel's obnoxious editor Stan (Murray Bartlett) as the Grandpa Joe figure, tagging along with Ariel and planning to steal the limelight for her work.


At the compound it's established immediately that Moretti is a cult leader who has surrounded himself by robe-wearing followers who obey his every instruction. The cultists call themselves "Levelists" and have their own bible, which contains creepy instructions like "Teach them young and they will be yours," which reminded me of Hank Penny's politically incorrect country hit 'Catch 'em Young, Treat 'em Rough, Tell 'em Nuthin'. The oddness initially manifests as odd but essentially harmless rituals like forcing the dinner guests to each take a bite from the same loaf of bread as it's passed around the table, but then in classic Wonka fashion, the guests are picked off and disappeared one by one, with only Ariel sensible enough to realise something is rotten in this chocolate factory.


That Wonka routine is all Opus has to offer. Green likely intends to make some grand point about the cult of celebrity but his script is too much of an unfocussed mess to get this across in any discernible way. Moretti's motivations are similarly muddled, and even an epilogue that forces Malkovich to attempt to explain what we've just watched doesn't make things any clearer. Part of the fun of Willy Wonka comes from seeing awful people get their just desserts (no pun intended), but aside from Stan's treatment of Ariel, the people who get violently dispatched here don't seem to have done anything to even come close to deserving such grisly fates. It's established that the first victim had some past dispute with Moretti, which makes us think he's doing the Vincent Price shtick from Theatre of Blood and killing off his critics, but the rest of the group are sycophantic in their devotion to him.


Despite the involvement of the great Nile Rodgers in writing Moretti's songs, it's impossible to believe that he was once bigger than Michael Jackson. While Rodgers' compositions (co-written with someone called "The Dream," sorry kids, I'm old) sound like real songs, albeit with lyrics purposely designed to provoke laughs, you can't imagine any of them being real world hits. When we're treated to "Dina Simone," Moretti's biggest hit of the '90s, it doesn't remotely sound like music from that era.


Edibiri is wasted in a role that squanders her comic talents as she plays the straight man to Moretti's clown. Malkovich is very much in Nicolas Cage mode here, stunt cast due to his meme-worthy persona, but he's undoubtedly the movie's biggest asset. Every time Malkovich is on screen we wake from our slumber (even when he appears to be half asleep himself), and the highlight sees the king of the slapheads lip sync to one of Moretti's numbers while performing some hilarious dance movies. But Malkovich is the one gimmick in a one-gimmick movie, and even his unique persona can't paper over the striking lack of originality on display here.

Opus is in UK/ROI cinemas from March 14th.