‘Truth or Dare’: To call this lame movie scary wouldn’t really be honest

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Lucy Hale (center) is a standout among the young cast of “Truth or Dare.” UNIVERSAL PICTURES

Truth? “Truth or Dare” is not a good movie.

Dare? Dare you to spend money to see it.

That’s most of what you need to know about this lame, scare-free film, which wants really badly to work in the vein of “It Follows” but has none of its intelligence.

Lucy Hale stars as one of a group of college students who go on spring break to Mexico — Olivia’s best friend Markie (Violett Beane) lies to get Olivia out of working for Habitat for Humanity without Olivia’s knowledge, which just seems like bad karma from the start.

So off they go, boozing and carousing, until the last night. That’s when a guy named Carter (Landon Liboiron) starts hitting on Olivia, buying her drinks. He’s nice enough, though, and he convinces Olivia and her friends to accompany him to a creepy abandoned church. Once they’re there, Carter passes out beers and suggests they play a game. How about truth or dare, maybe?

Sure, why not. They take turns and things get uncomfortable — one jerk-face guy reveals that Olivia has a crush on Markie’s boyfriend — until finally they call on Carter. Truth or dare? Truth. OK, someone asks, what are your intentions toward Olivia? She seemed nice and gullible, so he lured her and her friends there so that he could live, and he wouldn’t mind as much if strangers died, he says.

Buzzkill.

Before he bolts, Carter pulls Olivia aside and explains: The game will follow them wherever they go, and they have to play. If you don’t tell the truth, you die. If you don’t take the dare, you die. And these aren’t dares like having to reveal your first crush, or spin around until you get dizzy. The stakes are deadlier, which makes it sound like it might be scary.

It’s not.

Olivia is the first to realize that the game has followed them back to school. You know you have to play when whoever you’re talking to or in the vicinity of — this includes friends, strangers and animated corpses — all of a sudden look like they’re possessed by the spirit of Cesar Romero playing the Joker in the “Batman” TV show. (Instead, holy curses, it’s an evil spirit.)

Hurtful truths will be revealed and people will die as the survivors try to figure out how to beat the game. And bad dialogue will be delivered, such as, “The game is smart. We aren’t playing it. It’s playing us.”

It’s all generic and uninvolving (aside from Hale’s Olivia and Hayden Szeto as one of her friends, no one makes much of an impression, so you’re not as invested in who survives as you might be). Worse, the story doesn’t follow the rules that it sets for itself, which is often the case in movies like this, although there is an attempt at retrofitting the plot to make everything work a bit more neatly.

The fun in horror movies is in shocking the audience, making it squirm or, ideally, both. (See “A Quiet Place” for an outstanding recent example.) “Truth or Dare” does neither. Instead it just mopes along from one truth or dare to the next, leaving bodies and friendships in its wake but never making you care much about either.

★1⁄2

Universal Pictures presents a film directed by Jeff Wadlow and written by Wadlow, Michael Reisz, Jillian Jacobs and Chris Roach. Rated PG-13 (for violence and disturbing content, alcohol abuse, some sexuality, language and thematic material). Running time: 100 minutes. Now showing at local theaters.

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