Wednesday, 20 June 2018
Hereditary (2018)
I love horrors and I love A24. Hearing that they were releasing a new film called Hereditary piqued my interest by the title alone. After a family loses its matriarch they touch on various levels of grief. Soon after, there's an accident losing another member of the family and it spirals down from there.
Though A24 obviously use a wide range of case and crew but their films often have quite similar lighting and presence. This was the same again plus a little some some. There's a lot of natural lighting with soft edges. Even with the darkness the shadows are natural and soft, they're not afraid to show you things but doesn't shy away from have one sole focus in a somewhat blank canvas. As you can guess from the marketing 'this generations exorcist' there's some sort of spirit in this movie. Out of body it's portrayal is with moving light, subtle and only just out of the ordinary. There's a great shot with Alexx Wolff's character when he's alone in bed looking outside and we can see the heaters from the tree house reflected in his eyes. The glowing red reflecting from his dark eyes in his dark room may be a little on the house but looked great. There were some great silhouettes in the dark, wonderfully framed to heighten the horror element. They were bold and uncomfortable but almost out of focus, alarming but somehow not sudden.
The sound was fantastic, the daughter has a trademark sound, a clicking of her tongue, a 'cock' noise. Which as the film goes on it becomes more ominous. I'm a big fan of the slow quiet build ups for the score. Some horrors have got this down and Hereditary is one of them. You don't need a Jaws (1975) theme to alert you to the next attack. You want something that grows with your anxiety, something that finds its way with you instead of leading you there. The editing was also great. There were a few cuts that moved between identical shots in different locations and unique moments that utilises every angle. The mixture between abrupt cut and lingering on an image was perfect. Cuts were alarming but never whisked away before you had a complete look. But at 2hr7mins you there's time to see everything.
Now the cast, here we go. Amazing. Fascinating to watch. Milly Shapiro plays Charlie the daughter and she's good, she's interesting to watch and I'm curious to see what her next move will be. Gabriel Byrne is great as Steve, almost separates Steve the dad and Steve the husband and it works well, it's exactly what the story needs. Toni Collette is wonderful as always playing the mum, Annie. She gives away nothing as well as a lot. She's vulnerable but determined. The main point is we believe her. We believe she had a strained relationship with her mother though we never see it. As you would have seen from the trailer Annie creates miniature art pieces based on her home life. We see crude near accurate images of memories and moments she's trying to see from another angle. She uses it to grieve and in anger. It's her outlet and it's isolated from the rest of the family, hell from the outside of that one room. Some pieces she had even turned away to face the other direction. Even if we didn't believe she existed before the film we're given a little visual key anyway.
Now Alex Wolff. I could talk about him for a good while and not just because I think he's cute (cos man do I). If you haven't yet seen My Friend Dahmer (2017) go watch it and check out our review here. I thought Wolff was good in that but he excels in hereditary. He's genuine. His stages of grief are genuine and real. They're deep and dark. When someone experiences something as horrific as he has there's no comparable feeling. He has a weighted numbness that, again, is believable. His commitment to the role is commendable and clear. His reactions are fantastic and he holds his own against Oscar nommed Toni Collette. AND AGAIN is someone to look out for.
It's a slow burner but a well written script. Takes a little while to digest and rightly so. Even spoiler free there's so much to be said about this film I feel I've missed so many points to analyse. It's a very well written script that ties so much together. I almost hope I missed something so I've got another stone to unturn. 8/10
CINEMATES - A
Sunday, 10 June 2018
My Friend Dahmer (2017)
Completely intrigued by this because of course I am. It's about one of the most famous serial killers in the last 40 years. My Friend Dahmer is based on a graphic novel (by the same name) by artist John 'Derf' Backderf. It follows Backderfs relationship with Dahmer through high school until graduation and his first murder.
If you've not heard of him (how?) his first of many murders was committed in the late 70's. Ever notice that films set in the 60's and 70's are always muted? The colours are full. As if they've aged even when they haven't yet. The decor of course look dated to us though the high school, minus the clothes and prom, still look relatively recent. Costume was great, hair and make up must have had a field day with his glorious yet terrible hair. Same goes for the roadkill and acid filled jars. The sound was subtle, the score was gentle and rare. When it made an appearance if highlighted the potential severity of the scene. It elicited the same feeling as a good horror score would fear. There were a few uncomfortable scenes, not due to gore but social anxiety preemptive disgust, A few occasions you get second hand embarrassment. In a way to get attention Dahmer parodied a gentleman with cerebral palsy and pretends to have fits on the floor. It would be uncomfortable then but due to us as a society moving away from humour in mimicking disabled people it's even more awkward to see.
Some of the shots were quite interesting. A few of the opening shots were notable shot well. I recently read the graphic novel out of interest and some of the frames were taken shot for shot, as were parts of the dialogue. Which would make sense as a lot of the conversations actually happened. Some of the shots were a little distant, the film isn't to change your opinion on Dahmer it's to give you more information. So a lot of the shots are for observation and to put space in between him and everyone around him. Wasn't incredible but did what it should have.
So Dahmer himself is played by Ross Lynch. Recognise the name? Me neither, he's a Disney boy and I'm just too old for when he was in power. Yep star of Austin & Ally is now a serial killer. Props to him. I thoroughly enjoy actors choosing more unique and out there roles, especially when they're young. Same goes for Alex Wolff who plays Backderf. Previous Disney lad now in this and upcoming Hereditary (2018). Doing very different roles, moving away from Disney strongly. Either way I was impressed. Lynch was creepy and yet still had an air of adolescence about him. He had a moments of experienced faux confidence mixed with genuine confusion and loss. The key in the character, and the person, before the crimes was his loneliness. And that's captured well.
Granted it does feel a little serial killer 101, playing with dead animals and being that weird kid that people laughed at or avoided at school. But that's how it was. If you have the opportunity to read the graphic novel I'd recommend it, it's online. It's a unique perspective that doesn't have a great deal of narrative. That is the purpose of it, that its a lead up to a notorious killers first murder. Without that it would be a semi artsy film of a troubled young man with no help or direction that just made people uncomfortable. Without the biopic qualities it's a somewhat average film. The reason it's so interesting to watch is due to the reality of it.
Keep in mind it's not a traditional horror, drama biopic is more accurate. 6/10 for the film 8/10 for the total experience. Definitely worth reading more into if you're interested in character over story.
CINEMATES - A
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