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Tribune News Service
Tribune News Service
Entertainment
Moira Macdonald

Movie review: Emma Roberts and Dave Franco have 'Nerve,' but not much personality in uneven thriller

Like "Hunger Games" but digital and with cuter outfits, the uneven thriller "Nerve" pits teen against teen in a daredevil online game _ "like Truth or Dare," we're told, "minus the truth." Staten Island high-school senior Vee (Emma Roberts), frustrated when her best friend Sydney (Emily Meade) calls her a "watcher," signs up to play Nerve, the game all her friends are obsessively following. This means she must carry out a series of dares, beginning with kissing a handsome stranger (Dave Franco) who's reading Virginia Woolf in a diner, as handsome strangers do.

Yes, he's a plant _ a fellow contestant _ and the two become caught up in a string of increasingly lucrative challenges, all over Manhattan in the course of one long night. Stunts are performed, a really fabulous green-sequined dress is obtained (via a dare taking place in Bergdorf Goodman), and Vee quickly becomes "insta-famous." And while the opening challenges are silly, they soon get dark and dangerous _ and there's much talk of some dare going horribly wrong "last year in Seattle." Will Vee and her new dress make it out alive?

Unfortunately, the filmmakers _ busily splashing the film in crayon-colored light, vaguely sinister pop music and jittery camerawork _ forgot to give Vee and Handsome Stranger (his name's Ian) much personality. Franco grins diabolically throughout, and Roberts sounds a bit like a junior version of Sarah Jessica Parker's "Sex and the City" character Carrie Bradshaw (perhaps Vee watches this show a lot?); otherwise, they're awfully bland, and it's hard to get too invested in their fate. The ultimate message _ be careful in the digital forest _ is a reasonable one for the young audience at which "Nerve" is aimed, but they may be distracted by the film's most perplexing line, uttered by one teen to another: "Use a pay phone." Good luck out there, kids.

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