Five Nights at Freddy's (film)

Five Nights at Freddy's is a 2023 American supernatural horror film based on the video game franchise of the same name created by Scott Cawthon. Directed by Emma Tammi, who co-wrote the screenplay with Cawthon and Seth Cuddeback, from a story by Cawthon, Chris Lee Hill, and Tyler MacIntyre, the film stars Josh Hutcherson as a troubled security guard who accepts a night-time job at an abandoned family entertainment center, where he discovers its four animatronic mascots move and kill anyone that is still there after midnight. Elizabeth Lail, Piper Rubio, Mary Stuart Masterson, and Matthew Lillard appear in supporting roles.

Five Nights at Freddy's
Theatrical release poster
Directed byEmma Tammi
Screenplay by
Story by
  • Scott Cawthon
  • Chris Lee Hill
  • Tyler MacIntyre
Based onFive Nights at Freddy's
by Scott Cawthon
Produced by
Starring
CinematographyLyn Moncrief
Edited by
  • Andrew Wesman
  • William Paley
Music byThe Newton Brothers
Production
companies
Distributed byUniversal Pictures
Release dates
  • October 25, 2023 (2023-10-25) (United Kingdom)
  • October 27, 2023 (2023-10-27) (United States)
Running time
109 minutes[1]
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
Budget$20 million[2]

Jason Blum served as a producer on the film through his Blumhouse Productions banner, in association with Cawthon's Scott Cawthon Productions banner. Development of a Five Nights at Freddy's film adaptation began in April 2015, with the involvement of Warner Bros. Pictures. Roy Lee, David Katzenberg, and Seth Grahame-Smith were set to produce it, with Gil Kenan announced as director and co-writer. After several delays in production, the Warner Bros. version was no longer moving forward and Kenan dropped out of the project. In March 2017, Blumhouse Productions was announced as the new production company, with Chris Columbus set to direct and co-write. Columbus also ultimately left the project, and Emma Tammi was announced as his replacement in October 2022. The main cast were confirmed in December, while other cast additions were signed in March 2023. Principal photography began in February 2023 in New Orleans and ended in April.

Five Nights at Freddy's was theatrically released on October 27, 2023, by Universal Pictures; it was also simultaneously released on Peacock the same day. The film received generally negative reviews from critics, who criticized its slow pace, underutilization of the animatronics, and lack of scares.

Plot

Mike Schmidt, a mall cop, loses his job after assaulting a negligent father who he confused for being a kidnapper. He is sent to visit career counselor Steve Raglan, who offers him work as a night guard at an abandoned family diner known as Freddy Fazbear's Pizza. Though initially reluctant, Mike accepts the offer after social services threaten to take custody of his younger sister, Abby, and pass her over to his aunt Jane due to concerns of Mike's emotional stress.

On the first night, Mike falls asleep and has a dream where he witnesses the kidnapping and presumed murder of his brother Garrett, whom was taken away by an unknown man in a car. Mike is then met by five unknown children whom allegedly witnessed the kidnapping, and promptly run away. On the second night, Mike meets police officer Vanessa Shelly, who shows him around the restaurant and tells him that the place closed in the 1980s after five children were murdered there; the bodies were never found. Mike's dream is repeated, though after Mike attempts to confront one of the children, he is attacked and wakes up to find himself wounded physically, though his wounds are treated by Vanessa.

On the third night, Jane hires a group of delinquents to vandalize the restaurant in order to get Mike fired, an act which would enable her to gain custody of Abby. As the break-in occurs, the restaurant's animatronic mascots - Freddy Fazbear, Chica, Foxy and Bonnie - come alive and murder the delinquents. One of the vandals was Abby's babysitter, which requires Mike to bring Abby to his next shifts and Vanessa shows up each time. The animatronics become active once more, being hostile towards Mike though being friendly towards Abby. The animatronics befriend her, though Vanessa and Mike are hesitant, with the latter discovering that the animatronics are possessed by the ghosts of dead children, whom are led by a boy with blonde hair and allegedly talk about a "yellow rabbit" consistently.

In-between shifts, Mike explains the disappearance of Garrett when he was young, which became a cold case and that he had been taking sleeping pills every night in order to repeat his dreams and find who kidnapped his brother. After panicking from Abby's increasing relationship with the animatronics on the fourth night, Vanessa warns Mike to not bring Abby to the restaurant again and threatens to shoot him if he does. Mike gets Jane to babysit Abby, much to her frustration, as he goes back to the restaurant during the day and overdoses on his sleeping pills to go back into the dream.

Inside the dream, the five children appear again and tell Mike that he can stay with Garrett forever, in exchange for Abby. At Mike's house, Jane is murdered by "Golden Freddy", a golden variant of Freddy Fazbear possessed by the blonde boy, who takes Abby back to the restaurant. Mike is attacked several times inside of his dream and wakes up strapped to a torture device that attempts to tear off his face. He escapes the machine and flees the restaurant, but is critically injured until Vanessa arrives to help him.

After Mike details his dream, Vanessa reveals that she is the daughter of the serial killer that murdered his brother and the other five children, William Afton, and that the animatronics and souls of the children are under his control. She also tells him that they will likely attempt to murder Abby, much to Mike's dismay. He drives to the restaurant with the necessary equipment to disable the animatronics and save Abby, who is taken into a backroom by Chica. Chica tries to kill her by stuffing her inside of an animatronic suit with springlocks, though Mike disables most of the animatronics and saves Abby. However, he is attacked by Chica's cupcake and is separated from Abby, who is attacked by Foxy but is saved by Vanessa. Both animatronics are defeated, but as the group try to leave the restaurant, William, revealed to have been posing as "Steve Raglan" and having murdered Garrett, appears wearing the now decaying Spring Bonnie suit and knocks Mike unconscious and reenables the animatronics.

Knowing that they need to understand the truth, Abby begins drawing a picture of William murdering the children, while Vanessa distracts and shoots him but is afterwards stabbed. Abby shows her drawing to the animatronics, causing them to turn on William. Surrounded by the pizzeria's main mascots, part of his suit gets bitten off by the cupcake animatronic, triggering the springlock machinery inside of it and crushing his body as he is dragged into the back room of the restaurant and locked away. Mike and Abby carry a wounded Vanessa out of the restaurant, though she falls into a coma afterwards and is taken to a hospital. Mike continues to look after Abby and they return to their normal lives.

In a mid credits scene, Golden Freddy watches as the dying William Afton bleeds out in the corner, closing the door on him soon after.

In a post credits scene, Balloon Boy is shown appearing inside the taxi driver’s car.

Cast

  • Josh Hutcherson as Mike Schmidt, a new security guard at Freddy Fazbear's Pizza
  • Piper Rubio as Abby, Mike's younger sister
  • Elizabeth Lail as Vanessa, a local police officer
  • Matthew Lillard as Steve Raglan / William Afton, Mike's career counselor
  • Mary Stuart Masterson as Aunt Jane, Mike and Abby's aunt
  • Kat Conner Sterling as Max, Abby's babysitter
  • David Lind as Jeff
  • Christian Stokes as Hank
  • Joseph Poliquin as Carl
  • Lucas Grant as Garrett, Mike's younger brother who was abducted as a child
  • Theodus Crane as Jeremiah, Mike's co-worker at his previous job at a mall

Additionally, gaming YouTuber CoryxKenshin appears as a cabbie,[3] and YouTuber MatPat appears as Sparky's Diner waiter.

Voices and performers

Production

Development

In April 2015, Warner Bros. Pictures announced it had acquired the film rights to the Five Nights at Freddy's video game franchise with Roy Lee, David Katzenberg, and Seth Grahame-Smith set to produce the adaptation. Grahame-Smith stated that they would collaborate with franchise creator Scott Cawthon "to make an insane, terrifying and weirdly adorable movie".[5] In July 2015, Gil Kenan signed to direct the film from a screenplay co-written with Tyler Burton Smith.[6]

In March 2017, Cawthon tweeted announcing Blumhouse Productions as the film's new production company after Warner Bros. Pictures put the project in turnaround.[7] In May 2017, producer Jason Blum said he was excited and working closely with Cawthon on the film.[8] In June 2017, Kenan said he was no longer directing the film.[9]

In February 2018, Chris Columbus was announced as Kenan's replacement as director and writer, besides producing the film alongside Blum and Cawthon.[10] In August 2018, Cawthon revealed that the first draft of the film's script, which he wrote with co-author of the Five Nights at Freddy's novel trilogy, Kira Breed-Wrisley, was completed, and it would involve the events of the series' first game.[11] That same month, Blum wrote on Twitter that the film was aiming for a 2020 release.[12] In November, Cawthon announced that he scrapped the script, despite being liked by Columbus and Blum, as he "had a different idea for [the story], one that I liked better". It contributed to a further delay to the film, for which Cawthon took full responsibility.[13] In June 2020, during an interview with Fandom, Blum, when asked about the progress of the film, stated:

"It's super active, so I really feel like we have a very good shot at seeing a Five Nights at Freddy's movie...I feel like it's really moving forward; it's not stalled or anything else. It's moving forward rapidly. I don't want to put a timeline on it, but soon we'll get a movie. I feel really confident about that."[14]

In September 2021, Blum revealed that Columbus was no longer involved with the project, but it was still in active development.[15] In August 2022, Blum announced that Jim Henson's Creature Shop would be working on the animatronic characters for the film.[16] In October, Emma Tammi was announced as Columbus' replacement as director, in addition to co-writing the screenplay alongside Cawthon and Seth Cuddeback.[17]

Casting

In December 2022, Josh Hutcherson and Matthew Lillard joined the cast in undisclosed roles.[18] Five Nights at Freddy's-related YouTuber Dawko later revealed during a livestream that Hutcherson would portray the first game's security guard Mike Schmidt and Lillard would portray the franchise's main villain William Afton. He also revealed that Mary Stuart Masterson and Piper Rubio joined the cast as Mike's aunt Jane, and Mike's younger sister Abby, respectively.[19] In March 2023, it was reported that Kat Conner Sterling and Elizabeth Lail were cast in the film.[20][21] Lucas Grant and Jessica Blackmore have undisclosed roles.[22]

Mark Fischbach was contacted to have a role in the film, but turned it down due to a conflicting schedule with his own film Iron Lung.[23]

Filming

Principal photography was initially set to begin in March 2021.[24] However, due to script issues, filming was delayed.[15] Filming began in New Orleans on February 1, 2023, under the working title Bad Cupcake, with an estimated production budget, before tax incentives, of $25 million,[25] and wrapped on April 3.[26][27] Lillard began filming his scenes in mid-February.[28]

Music

The Newton Brothers composed the film's score,[29] while the fan-made song "Five Nights at Freddy's" by The Living Tombstone was used for the credits.[30]

Release

Five Nights at Freddy's was released simultaneously in theaters and on Peacock in the United States by Universal Pictures on October 27, 2023, alongside After Death, Freelance, and Sight.[31][32] It was released two days earlier on October 25, 2023 in the United Kingdom.[33]

Marketing

In October 2023, a pop-up location in Los Angeles, California was built at Sunset Boulevard. The location is described as being decorated similarly to the Freddy Fazbear's Pizza location as seen in the film.[34] A making-of book titled The Art and Making of Five Nights at Freddy's: The Movie is expected to release on August 20, 2024.[35] A film novelization of the movie will also release on December 26, 2023.[36]

Reception

Box office

In the United States and Canada, the film is projected to gross around $50 million from 3,550 theaters in its opening weekend.[2]

Critical response

On the review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes, 27% of 77 critics' reviews are positive, with an average rating of 4.5/10.[37] Metacritic, which uses a weighted average, assigned the film a score of 29 out of 100, based on 22 critics, indicating "generally unfavorable" reviews.[38]

Murtada Elfadl of Variety felt the animatronic characters were underutilized, with the film instead focusing on "a baffling plot and backstory for their protagonist". He also criticized a perceived lack of effective jump scares and concluded, "In trying to adapt the game for the screen, they forgot what makes the original special, wringing unintentional laughter from its bizarre story instead of entertaining audiences".[39] Dylan Roth of The New York Observer gave the film a score of one out of five and wrote, "There are jump scares, but no real thrills. There are jokes, but no genuine laughs".[40]

The Guardian's Benjamin Lee gave a two out of five rating, arguing "The low-stakes, late-night thrill we expect from the material never arrives, held back by a mixture of indecisive restraint and misplaced self-importance. Five Nights at Freddy's is somehow a slog to get through and will be promptly forgotten by morning".[41] The New York Times's Natalia Winkelmann was similarly negative: "...[Although] Five Nights at Freddy's, based on a popular video game franchise, reaches for horror-comedy flair, this dreary, mild adaptation never achieves the hybrid pleasures of a movie like M3GAN. You may chuckle, but it’s hard to tell if the movie is laughing with you".[42]

Meagan Navarro of Bloody Disgusting gave a score of three out of five and wrote, "It's the type of handsomely made, charming creature feature that'll play well at slumber parties or rowdy theaters full of obsessed fans, which is precisely its target audience. Five Nights at Freddy's won't scare the pants off of seasoned horror fans; the animatronic denizens of Freddy Fazbear's Pizzeria will likely make you want to hug them instead".[43] Total Film's Neil Smith scored the film a two out of five and ended his review, "With robot heads containing flesh-mangling chainsaws, faces resembling that of battle-scarred Terminators, and the lumbering gait of Romero zombies, Freddy Fazbear and his pals would seem precision-tooled for terror. Sadly, though, they are about as scary as Barney the purple dinosaur in what is ultimately a ploddingly predictable, gore-lite yawner".[33]

Mark Kennedy of the Associated Press stated: "Caught between PG and R, as well as lost at the crossroads of inadvertent comedy and horror, the PG-13 Five Nights at Freddy's has to go down as one of the poorest films in any genre this year".[44]

Future

In August 2018, Cawthon said that if the first film were to be successful, there could be a second and third film, following the events of the second and third games, respectively.[11] In January 2023, in an interview on the podcast WeeklyMTG, Lillard revealed he signed a three-picture deal with the studios.[32]

See also

References

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