Oh, those evil doppelgangers and their wonderful place in horror lore. Invasion of the Body Snatchers, Twin Peaks, The Thing and now Us, Jordan Peeleโ€™s extremely creepy follow up to Get Out. I ask you, whatโ€™s creepier than your double trying to slash your neck? Peele knows that itโ€™s the ultimate nightmare, and Us plays upon it with chilling glee. The film starts with a quote about America having many miles of tunnels underneath its surface, then a quick flashback shot of a C.H.U.D. videotape next to a VCR. A TV plays an advertisement for Hands Across America, and you already have all sorts of subtext before anything even really happens. When a young girl (Madison Curry) in the same โ€™80s flashback drifts away from her father at an amusement park and finds herself in a darkened hall of mirrors, Peele immediately states that heโ€™s not playing around with this movie. Prepare to be scared, disturbed and uncomfortable in a good way. The film then jumps to the present day, where Adelaide and Gabe (Lupita Nyongโ€™o and Winston Duke) are taking their children, Zora and Jason (Shahadi Wright Joseph and Evan Alex) to the beach. Itโ€™s the same beach we saw in the flashback and, much to her chagrin, Adelaide was that young girl who ventured into that hall of mirrors. Sheโ€™s not happy about revisiting the Santa Cruz pier, but the husband and kids really want to, so she takes one for the team. Us has a larger scope than I was expecting and qualifies as one of the better apocalypse movies Iโ€™ve ever seen. No question, writer-director Peele has been gobbling up zombie, slasher and isolation horror movies all of his life, and their influences play a significant part in his vision. The movie is a mind-bender, but itโ€™s also an efficient, bare-knuckled horror-thriller. In short, itโ€™s the whole package as far as horror movies go.

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