Sting-2024
Director Kiah Roache-Turner
Starring Alyla Browne, Ryan Corr
Scott’s Review #1,436
Reviewed August 18, 2024
Grade: B-
Sting (2024) is a lightweight but suspenseful late-night horror flick. It takes a bit to get going, and at only one hour and thirty minutes, it’s too long for it to take off and have a satisfying effect.
The set designs are the best part as the wintery Brooklyn, New York atmosphere pairs well with the dingy and stuffy walk-up apartment complex where the action occurs, and a family lives.
The dusty rooms, creaking floors, and walls are well-done thanks to dim lighting and a secluded vibe. I bought it because the family lives this way, but it feels cozy, thanks to these trimmings.
As with most modern horror films, the plot makes little sense and is not plausible.
To compare Sting to other films, it plays like Arachnophobia (1990) with a dash of Alien (1979) thrown in, but it is inferior to those films because it lacks either the campy humor or the wonderful special effects.
The film is not scary but, at most, thrilling.
Sting reintroduces a spider as the protagonist with marginal success. The spider starts innocently but grows into a sinister carnivore with human beings as its desired menu item.
Events surround twelve-year-old Charlotte (Alyla Browne), who obtains a pet spider who becomes her pride and joy and whom she names Sting. Once she realizes that Sting plans to eat her entire family, Charlotte goes into protector mode and must fight for their survival.
Directed by Kiah Roache-Turner, an Australian director unknown to me, she uses Australian actors primarily.
Sting starts well with a scene involving an elderly tenant named Helga. She begins to hear noises in the walls and assumes they are rats, so she calls a local exterminator.
Helga has dementia, and the audience quickly realizes she has already called an exterminator but has forgotten. The investigating exterminator is snatched by an unknown force and dragged into the wall canals of the old building.
Then Roache-Turner takes us back to four days prior.
This point immediately made me invested in the film, especially when other characters are introduced, and we learn about Helga’s connection.
What’s going to happen in the next four days?
Unfortunately, Sting loses steam from this point, introducing marginally exciting characters. Charlotte, her overworked stepfather, Ethan (Ryan Corr), her clueless and frazzled mother, Heather (Penelope Mitchell), and her creepy German Aunt Gunter (Robyn Nevin).
Stock characters like a boozy Spanish neighbor, the weird Asian kid upstairs, and the comical black exterminator are included.
Hey, at least diversity was added.
The only likable character is Ethan. He struggles to connect with the bratty Charlotte through graphic novels and the demands put upon him by Heather’s family, who do not like him for some reason.
The poor guy serves as the building superintendent, works a day job, attempts to do creative work by night, and is a surrogate father. Sounds like a hero to me.
The family drama’s point only adds filler to the already slow-paced film and has nothing to do with the main event of Sting eating the family.
Charlotte is quite unlikeable, and I rooted for Sting to turn on her and make her its next victim. She mostly pouts and broods and has a sense of entitlement. I’m not sure why Roache-Turner made the character this way; she should have softened her.
Events do pick up towards the end, when a character is finally killed, and the others are accosted and put into webs, presumably to be dined on later.
This was anticlimactic since Charlotte is the character we are supposed to root for, and I hated her.
Predictably but also clever is how a perfect sequel setup occurs at the end. I’m not sure Sting is good enough to warrant a sequel, but box office receipts will determine this.
Sting (2024) is entertaining and fun, but it’s not much more. I’ve already started to forget about it.