We’re All Going To The World’s Fair is an indie horror film that I found on HBO Max. I never heard about it before (it looks like it was only released in a small handful of theaters back in April) so I decided to check it out.
Casey (Anna Cobb) is a fairly typical teenager. She spends a lot of time in her room watching YouTube videos. One day, she decides to record a video trying the “World’s Fair Challenge.” The challenge involves chanting “I want to go to the World’s Fair” three times then wiping a bloody finger across your computer screen. After watching a video with strobing lights, the participants are supposed to start noticing changes in themselves. A few days later, she gets a message from JLB (Michael J Rogers) stating that she is in trouble. The two talk over Skype, where JLB convinced Casey to continue posting videos to document her deteriorating mental state. However, it seems like JLB thinks this is all a game. But it’s not a game to Casey.
Sadly, I didn’t understand the point of The World’s Fair. There are a lot of long, boring, drawn-out scenes that seem to have nothing to do with the plot. Scenes of Casey walking through the woods to a clearing where she talks about nothing. Or a scene of Casey filming local traffic near an AutoZone? From what I can tell, these are absolutely pointless scenes that just take up time. And while we do get a few scenes of Casey acting strangely, we don’t get anything to really connect them to the World’s Fair Challenge, other than this all happens after she did it.
I would have liked to have seen more videos of Challenge participants with a little more consistency in their “symptoms.” Sure, some people have physical changes while others have mental changes but without having all of the participants having some sort of common theme in their changes, it’s difficult to connect all of this to the Challenge. Or, if we’re going to have all of the participants have different results, give us some sort of mystical being behind the changes. Otherwise, all we seem to have are some mentally ill people making videos. It’s more sad than scary.
Unfortunately, I can’t recommend watching We’re All Going To The World’s Fair. It had a great premise with no payoff. I would love to see someone with a bigger budget or more resources remake the movie to add more eerie elements to the film. But in it’s current state, it isn’t worth the 86 minutes it takes to watch it.