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‘Umma’ Review – Sandra Oh Gets Haunted By Fresh Ideas and Bad Horror Tropes

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‘Umma’ Review – Sandra Oh Gets Haunted By Fresh Ideas but Bad Horror Tropes

Bloody Disgusting’s Umma review is spoiler-free.

Writer/Director Iris K. Shim’s feature debut, Umma works as a rare example of a movie that would’ve been better served without the horror. Themes of cultural identity, heritage, abuse, complex mother-daughter relationships, and generational abuse present fertile ground for exploration and conflict. It gets neglected, however, buckling under the weight of conventional horror clichés, ineffective jump scares, a lack of tension, and disjointed storytelling.

Amanda (Sandra Oh) lives a quiet, simple life on a rural farm with her teen daughter Chrissy (Fivel Stewart). She’s a first-generation Korean American who’s carved out a successful life for herself selling the honey that she harvests with Chrissy. She’s also disconnected from the world, save for local shop owner and friend Danny (Dermot Mulroney). That’s by design; a traumatic past caused Amanda to turn her back on her family, specifically her abusive umma (mother). The residual trauma means that Amanda refuses to allow electricity in her vicinity, making for a sheltered, off-grid existence. Then her uncle shows up one day with her mother’s remains, warning her to honor her ancestry and give umma a proper burial lest she angers her mother’s spirit.

But Amanda’s insistent on ignoring it until it festers and threatens to take control.

umma review movie

Umma consistently introduces fascinating ideas but never knows what to do with them in the genre space. Amanda’s rejection of her heritage and raising her daughter wholly removed from it makes for a compelling topic, but Shim struggles to marry it to horror. In place of a steady progression, Umma instead offers confusing, choppy edits and clunky scene transitions that disorient. Amanda goes from doting mother to crazed and back again in a blink, without much of a trigger. To her credit, Oh gives it her all regardless. Shim mistakes shrieking music cues for tension building, and the haunted house jump scares are by the book and stale. A quick rush of a ghastly figure here, or ghostly figures lurking in the shadows, serve as the only fleeting moments to indicate why Amanda goes from well-adjusted to completely unhinged.

Shim’s heavy focus on the conventional horror clichés means that the most exciting ideas get underdeveloped to a detriment. Fleeting mentions of gwishin or visions of a nine-tailed gumiho never get explained. These nods to a richer, unexplored mythology tease the potential for what might have been. 

Umma review sam raimi

That restraint extends to the characters, too. Thanks to the flashback opening, we know from the outset why Amanda’s haunted by her past and why she harbors a visceral aversion to electricity. We know she loves her daughter and that Chrissy’s finally coming to an age where she’d like to leave the nest. Beyond that, though, Shim struggles to flesh them out and develop them further, which sums up Amanda’s arc. When the final confrontation arrives, it ends with a quiet whimper and a “that’s it?”

There’s a very intangible quality about Umma. The ideas and core takeaways are easy to grasp, but the execution falls flat. Shim attempts to dovetail Chrissy leaving mom behind with mom finally facing her haunted past but makes that haunting literal with generic haunted house tropes instead. It results in a sparse story with great ideas but not much else.

Umma is in theaters now. Do you agree with our Umma review? Sound off below!

Horror journalist, RT Top Critic, and Critics Choice Association member. Co-Host of the Bloody Disgusting Podcast. Has appeared on PBS series' Monstrum, served on the SXSW Midnighter shorts jury, and moderated horror panels for WonderCon and SeriesFest.

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‘Thrill Ride’ – Ryuhei Kitamura’s New Thriller Traps People Upside Down on a Roller Coaster!

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Pictured: 'Final Destination 3'

If you want to watch a fun movie, watch a Ryuhei Kitamura movie. Whether it’s 2000’s Versus, 2004’s Godzilla: Final Wars, 2008’s The Midnight Meat Train or 2022’s underseen The Price We Pay, Kitamura always knows how to deliver a wild and crazy good time.

Up next from Ryuhei Kitamura? Deadline reports that he’ll be directing Thrill Ride, which sounds a bit like the best parts of Final Destination 3… expanded into a feature film!

Deadline details, “the English-language film will tell the story of a group of people, including two young women, who are trapped upside down on a roller coaster taken over by a mysterious saboteur threatening to drop them all one-by-one to their deaths.”

Film Bridge International is launching the project for sales ahead of the Cannes market.

Chad Law and Christopher Jolley wrote the screenplay.

Thrill Ride is exactly the type of high-concept based thriller that our customers are looking for in the marketplace,” said Film Bridge’s Ellen Wander and Jordan Dykstra. “With Ryuhei at the helm, we know his vision and execution will deliver thrills of the highest quality.”

“As a hardcore rollercoaster fan since I was young, I immediately fell in love with this script filled with suspense, action, crazy ups and downs, turns, loops, and corkscrews at maximum speed,” adds Kitamura. “I can’t wait to get on a ride and bring life to the wildest rollercoaster imaginable.”

We’re already seated. Stay tuned for more on Thrill Ride as we learn it.

‘The Midnight Meat Train’

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