As co-written by Searching director Aneesh Chaganty and directed by Will Merrick and Nick Johnson, Missing retains some of its predecessor's smarts. These films are good at showing us online thought processes being worked through in real time: pulling up Google Translate to make sense of an international phone call, doubling back to try established passwords on new sites of interest. It takes our heroine mere milliseconds to access info a PI like Philip Marlowe would need a full reel to dig up, and Merrick and Johnson can use the time saved to dive down disparate rabbit holes. Their film inverts Chaganty's original, which saw a digitally illiterate dad getting closer to his offspring, using her laptop as a map; here, daddy's girl Reid has to walk a mile in her mother's digital footprints, a trajectory that eventually involves sourcing and reading her guardians' online dating correspondence. (Be glad they kept it PG-13.) Yet for all the film's online toing-and-froing, and for all its polished cybersheen (websites bearing the name of actual websites, yay!), Missing perpetuates Searching's inbuilt conservatism; at heart, it's an afternoon TV movie rewired by tech bros. The messages stack up like spam email: keep your location settings toggled on at all times, trust the police, the FBI and Google (who are transparent and straightforward, unlike people), and don't go south of the border on your jollies, because - eek - men with guns. (Unlike, you know, North America.) It's busy enough to keep you from checking your own phone, which is a win of sorts, and Reid makes an engaging hub, but it visibly loses confidence in the all-screens conceit heading into the rote finale; once the novelty starts to wear off, you miss the heft of sustained interpersonal activity. These movies are fine for what they are - gimmicky distraction aimed at kids who can't leave their devices alone - but they're also something like The Fugitive if Tommy Lee Jones had tracked Harrison Ford via Find My Mobile and then sent an Uber to pick him up.
Missing is now playing in cinemas nationwide.
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