If you like my psychic abilities, you should try my pancakes. |
Odd begins to see some ghostly baddies that are out of the ordinary and, apparently, signal big trouble for the little town of Pico Mundo. Odd has to save the town and himself while keeping his skills under wraps from friends and coworkers. Does it lead to hilarious misunderstandings and people assuming that Odd has lost his marbles? You betcha.
For a movie that deals with dead stuff and ghosts, it's actually quite tame. So tame, in fact, I debated whether or not this should be a Freaky Friday-worthy movie. But one girl's tame is another girl's freaky so I went with it.
The ending is predictable in an "ending with a twist" sort of way.
Throughout the movie I was racking my brain trying to think of where I had heard the name Odd Thomas before. It wasn't until the credits that I realized Odd Thomas is a series of books by Dean Koontz. (Dean and I shared a brief but intense literary fling during my first year of junior high but I soon left him for VC Andrews and her love of incestuous siblings.) I'm tempted to read the books because the movie glosses over the most interesting part of Odd's life which is communicating with the regular everyday dead folk. I feel that could have been developed more instead of the emphasis on Odd's relationship with his girlfriend Stormy.
Romance in movies bores me. Yeah, I said it.
Conclusion:
I give it a 3 out of 5 star rating. It's definitely one of the more original movies I've watched in a while. And it made me want to pick up where I left off with Dean Koontz. Any good movie should make you revert back to your junior high self.