Wednesday, September 29, 2021

Death Of Me: Fool Me Once, Etc.

Like anyone else, I have my biases, and though I know they shouldn’t color my opinions or perspectives or the choices I make, sometimes they do. Case in point: More often than not I will avoid anything directed or produced by the folks who gave us the Saw franchise, because even though I thought the first one had some stuff going for it and it didn’t really look like anything else at the time, everything that followed embodies for me the worst things about sequels and franchising in horror film. And over the course of multiple films (and multiple franchises), they’ve refined it into a slick, technically competent, profitable revenue stream. They don’t make films, really - they make product. And I’m not here for that.

So, full confession: I started to write up Death Of Me, which is directed by old Saw hand Darren Lynn Bousman, a month or two ago. But I started the film (which had a premise that at least piqued my interest), got as far as his credit on the title screen, and said “nope.” Shut it off, opted for something else instead.

But it sort of nagged at me. Am I being fair? Plenty of good directors have stinkers in their catalog, there’s no reason the reverse can’t be true as well. I was sort of curious about how the film would play out. And it’s important to look past our biases and snobberies once in awhile. Sometimes you want to give a filmmaker another chance, and well, what do you know, this is one of those times it…didn’t pay off. Sorry to say, it’s a muddled, cliched mess.

The film opens on a beautiful landscape in Thailand, overlaid with some ethereal singing, before landing on a couple passed out in the bedroom of their rental. It looks like they had a wild night, and the television behind them is droning on about a typhoon that’s about twelve hours away from making landfall. It’s gonna be a bad one, and the meteorologist is urging everyone to evacuate. The couple is Christine and Neil Oliver. Neil’s a travel writer, Christine is along for the ride, and that’s…pretty much all we get on that front. Indeed they did have a wild night the night before, and in trying to reconstruct it, they go to Neil’s phone and discover a bunch of photos and a long video. It seems like they got pretty wasted, and in the course of their bar crawl they ended up at a place way off the beaten path, and ended up drinking something that the video reveals was clearly spiked. So that’s not good. The waitress gives Christine some kind of amulet as a gift, and the next time the video cuts back in, they’re somewhere else entirely, barely able to walk. Christine slumps to the ground, and Neil, obviously in some kind of stupor, bends her over, undoes his pants, does what you think…

…before strangling her to death, snapping her neck, and burying her in a shallow ditch.

So here they are, faced with video evidence that he killed her, and yet here they both are, very much alive.

There are potentially a couple of different stories here - you’ve got the tourist couple off the beaten path, at the mercy of the locals and their strange customs, and then you’ve also got two people trying to figure out what happened during a 12-hour blackout. Sort of like The Hangover, only not played for laughs. Either one of these could have made for a solid movie on their own (though the former has been done plenty already), but instead what we get is something that starts out as the latter and ends up being the former, and so it’s sort of a mess. The video is sort of the instigating factor, but almost immediately it’s clear that there’s something not quite right going on in this little village, and that’s really where most of the movie happens. Which isn’t to say that the story is actually developed all that much. It turns pretty quickly into Christine and Neil alternately running around looking for each other, Christine hallucinating some creepy shit, and then waking up someplace else like a reset button has been hit on the scene. Neil looks vaguely confused and yells for Christine, Christine sees something nightmarish and passes out, lather, rinse, repeat. It doesn’t take long before it feels extremely predictable. That she’s experiencing hallucinations also gives the filmmakers a license to write off whatever set piece they want as a hallucination, whether it makes much narrative sense or not. It’s less a story and more a bunch of ideas for scary moments stitched together under the assumption that “this is really happening/oops, no it isn’t” will be enough to carry it.

What’s more, it’s another horror film that doesn’t trust that its audience is paying attention, so it has all of the restraint of a fire alarm. Every moment in the film is underlined with pulsing synths and spooky, ethereal singing and though it doesn’t really traffic in jump scares (thank heaven for small mercies), it goes right for music stings whenever the slightest thing happens, shouting at you “YOU SHOULD BE SCARED NOW.” It isn’t frightening - it’s irritating. It feels very much in construction like one of those horror films where they came up with a bunch of moments which are in and of themselves scary, but that exist in isolation from each other and from any larger narrative context, so instead of things emerging organically from the people and place and circumstances, we’re ushered from one nightmare bit to another with not a lot of regard for how it all ties together.

And the hell of is, there’s stuff going on underneath that makes me think that it didn’t have to be this way. The “small foreign village with mysterious traditions” angle, though nothing new (and maybe a little icky when it’s white folks in the middle of a poor part of Asia), is actually handled reasonably well for the first two acts or so. Since a decent chunk of the film is in unsubtitled Thai, it does develop a sense of isolation and paranoia as Neil and Christine run into obstacle after obstacle in trying to leave, and the villagers aren’t leering villains - quite the opposite, they’re very happy to see Christine wherever she goes, and it can be really unnerving at times. There’s a lot of little bits of business going on in the background (albeit almost drowned out by the constant reminders that Scary Things Are Happening) and even though none of the characters are really developed into people at all (Neil is essentially just vague confusion on legs), nobody chews the scenery that much either. There’s an expatriate with the stock overly-precocious daughter, but even that sort of pays off by the end. It doesn’t really need the weird video angle at all, and that’s certainly not where it’s doing most of the work, but if there’s a choice between developing an atmosphere or going for the cheap shock, it’s gonna go for the cheap shock every single time.

Ultimately a lot of what good there is ends up undone by the predictable rhythm of the film and a twist that I mostly had puzzled out by the end of the second act. This leads into a third act that goes on far, far too long - everything that’s been going on has to be explained to us by one of the characters, and this leads into about three fake-out endings before the film actually ends. There’s the big reveal, and instead of smashing to end credits while the revelation is still fresh, it drags it out, and then drags it out some more until by the end you’re just wanting it to stop already. There isn’t a single ounce of subtlety in this film from start to finish, and so what we end up with is less a story about two people in a dangerous situation with no immediate way out, and more a catalog of things that range from genuinely creepy to stock scares inflicted on a couple of nonentities. None of it is surprising, and everything works out pretty much the way you expect it to, since none of the multiple false endings are in and of themselves surprising or any kind of twist. The result is basically a whole bunch of scary parts thrown at you, mortared together by plot points that carry no surprise at all. It’s occasionally kind of gross, occasionally kind of creepy, but it’s mostly just an inert exercise in cliche and scenery. I gave it a shot, but I don’t think I’ll be making the same mistake twice.

IMDB entry
Available on Netflix
Available on Amazon 

Wednesday, September 22, 2021

The Vigil: Laid To Rest

As movie monsters go, you can’t get more classic than the ghost. They’re generally portrayed as restless, tethered to our world by something unfinished or unresolved. Sometimes they’re benign, sometimes they’re vengeful, but that’s their thing: They can’t move on. They can be read as an externalization of our regrets, or our fear of regret. We are haunted by the things we can’t let go.

And The Vigil is an excellent example of how the idea of the ghost can work both as a monster and a metaphor. It’s spooky, thoughtful, and surprisingly moving.

We open on a room in what looks like a community center or a church annex, with a group of people sitting around, relating the events of the last week. A woman talks about asked out, and how oddly forward it felt. A man is asked how a job interview went, and he relates that it didn’t go as well as it could have, noting that he’d made the mistake of handwriting his resume on a piece of loose-leaf paper. These are people who seem to be brand new to modern life, despite being fully grown. And as it turns out, that’s exactly the case - they’re all former Hasidim, who’ve left a very cloistered, insular life behind, and are struggling to adjust to a culture that is almost entirely foreign to them. This is a support group, then, where they share their successes and get tips on how to navigate this new existence more easily.

Yakov Ronen - he of the loose-leaf resume - is having a rough time of it. He’s having trouble finding work, he’s having trouble making rent, he’s down to choosing between buying food or the medication he takes for his panic attacks. And so as the group is departing for the night, waiting outside on the street, is Reb Shulem, the rebbe for the community these people have left behind. You get the sense he’s done this before - waited outside, trying to coax the strays back into the flock, and the group leader is very unhappy to see him. But he tells Yakov he has work for him. A member of the community has passed away, and Shulem needs a shomer - someone to hold vigil over the deceased until morning.

Typically this is a volunteer, someone who knew the deceased, but in cases where none are available, someone can be paid to perform the service, and the deceased was reclusive, estranged from pretty much everyone in his life except his wife, never leaving the house. Yakov’s not really in much of a position to refuse $400 for five hours’ worth of work, so he goes with the rebbe to the house of the deceased. It’ll just be him, the body, and the deceased’s widow, who is elderly and frail and expected to sleep through the night. They had someone lined up, but he left suddenly.

Well, he fled the house, to be precise. He said there was something in the house with him. Something…wrong.

What follows is very much a long, dark night of the soul. Yakov is left alone in the apartment not just with the deceased and the widow, but as it transpires, he’s also left alone with his own disconnection from his old community and heritage, his own guilt and unresolved trauma around the tragedy that drove him out of the community, and on top of that, there is some extremely weird shit happening in this apartment, and soon enough everything comes to a head. There is some real ambiguity here in terms of how much of this is actually happening, and how much of it is potentially hallucination, brought on by a lack of sleep or food or medication. I do think the film commits to a particular reading, but it doesn’t do so right away, leaving things open for awhile. It begins as you’d expect, with the requisite mysterious noises and things glimpsed out of the corner of the eye, but as the film moves on it becomes harder and harder for dismiss what’s happening as the product of an overactive imagination. I don’t know that it’s especially innovative on that front (though it does make some interesting choices), but it’s executed skillfully and with a decent amount of restraint. The film does a good job of escalating tension - it’s a spooky, atmospheric apartment, all dim lighting and staircases going up into the dark, and though it’s a small location there’s a real sense of geography, where things start to feel more dangerous the further away from the living room Yakov goes - a feeling that there are terrible things just outside of the range of the few lights that are on. It’s especially effective in the climax, a confrontation set at the end of a long, narrow hallway, lit only by candlelight. There’s something of the nightmare about it, cryptic and awful without being obtuse.

It’s visually inventive as well, in a way that low-budget indie films sort of have to be. Everything is shot with a lens that makes shots look at little warped and distorted around the very edges, a subtle fisheye effect that lends everything a sense of slight unreality and unease, and shots often transition with a very brief stutter or fast-forward effect that further heightens the feeling of dislocation. Yakov spends a fair amount of time on his phone, and his text messages and web search results are superimposed on the screen next to him - it’s highly artificial, but it works because it’s less disruptive than constant cuts to the screen of his phone and provides us with more insight into his character without just telling us things. The action moves between the present and flashbacks to Yakov’s past, so as the film goes on we get a better sense of what’s brought him to this place in his life, and like the rest of the film, the flashbacks are set at night, grainy from low light punctuated by streetlights and lens flare which again make everything feel slightly otherworldly, like a fragmented dream.

Where this film falls down is in a tendency to try too hard. There’s a flashback at the beginning that is creepy and atmospheric, the scenes in the support group are natural and comfortable, and there's a real sense of tension between Yakov and the rebbe, but then a lot of that restraint and subtlety gets left behind once the vigil begins. The soundtrack is pretty obtrusive, all full of ominous strings and brass and synthesizer that often double and triple-underline things that need very little highlighting at all. The setting and the action rely on minimalism, and the constant blare of the score serves to undermine that. There’s also a couple of jump scares that the film doesn’t really need, and though they aren’t especially irritating, you sort of wish they’d gone for something a little less obvious.

But despite that, I think the film ultimately redeems itself in the end, tying Jewish mysticism (in a more respectful treatment than other films I’ve seen) and two generations’ worth of trauma and survivor’s guilt together into a story about literal and metaphorical ghosts that gives as much space to grief and sorrow and the opportunity for healing as tension and dread. It might not be a flawless film, but it’s a thoughtful and well-considered one and has some extremely evocative moments. Ultimately, it ends up being a film that eloquently addresses the need to take the things that haunt us and lay them to rest.

IMDB entry
Available on Hulu
Available on Amazon

Wednesday, September 15, 2021

Uzumaki: From The Page To The Screen

It’s easy sometimes, watching horror films, to forget how important filmmaking technique can be, and I think part of that is because anytime you’re dealing with genre film, there’s a tendency to lean into familiar cliches, into obvious settings and a style of filmmaking that is purely functional. Give the audience what they want as efficiently as you can. And I guess maybe that’s a style of its own, but to me it’s not an especially interesting one. I think sometimes people forget that how you tell a story is as important as anything else, and when you aren’t thinking about the potential of a visual medium for evoking all of the things the story usually does, you’re missing out.

This all occurred to me watching Uzumaki (Spiral), a film that isn’t the most frightening thing I’ve ever seen, but works as something really creepy in its relentless cinematic strangeness. It has less in common with other Japanese horror films than it does the work of H.P. Lovecraft and David Lynch, and that’s very much to its credit.

Kirie Goshima is a young woman who lives in the small village of Kurozo-cho, and she has the kinds of worries and cares that come with being a teenager in a small town. She’s worried about school, looks after her widower father, has a kind-of, sort-of boyfriend in Shuichi Saito, and an annoying boy constantly following her around, desperate to win her favor. But it’s just another day, another walk home from school, when she notices a man staring intently at something on a fence. It’s a small snail, its shell a pronounced spiral pattern.

He can’t stop staring at it. 

It gets…weirder from there. Much weirder. It’s difficult to really get into much more detail, not because of spoilers really, but because this is less a film with a specific narrative than it is a series of vignettes about the inhabitants of a village that seems to be in the steadily mounting grip of an ancient curse. The story centers around Kirie and Shuichi as they try to figure out what’s going on, but that’s about as far as it goes - it’s presented more as a slice of life than anything else.

The result is something pervasively unsettling and creepy, and there’s a number of different things feeding into it. Part of it is that it really starts off more like a comedy or melodrama than anything else. A lot of this is down to the acting, which is exaggerated and stylized, and the characters are very much types, rather than fully fleshed-out people. So it begins feeling very much like a whimsical look at a small town, albeit one introduced by a fairly gruesome image in the opening credits, so the tone is pulling you in a couple of different directions from the start. As the film goes on, the weirdness starts moving in from the edges, and the performances never really get any less melodramatic, so the end result feels like the heightened emotions you experience in a dream, and so there’s an uncertainty, a sense that the usual rules for storytelling are getting tossed out the window. A lot of the strangeness is even peripheral to the story - students walking through the hallway of their school framed by other students, silent and heads bowed as if in mourning, a nurse standing in an elevator with the protagonists, staring fixedly up into space for no apparent reason, Greek choruses of gossips, the whole point of the film is that there’s something very wrong with this town, and these little fillips contribute to an already uneasy atmosphere. The story at least begins as a very oh-golly look at a small town with hints of the grotesque, and the heightened emotions and incidental oddness feel very much like something David Lynch would produce. I know it’s easy to describe anything strange in film as “Lynchian” (probably the filmic equivalent of describing something in literature as “Kafkaesque”) but I really do see that same sense of the uncanny at work here.

This is very much reinforced by the visuals - the look of the film is desaturated, with Kurozu-cho being largely gray and muddy to start with, and much of it is shot with a pronounced reddish-blue cast (extended into almost a spot-color effect for emphasis at points) that makes it look like it’s a much older film than the setting would suggest. This might have been as much a limitation of budget and technology as anything else, but combined with the performances, it also reminded me of some of Guy Maddin’s work at times, which is not a comparison I’m usually drawing on for the films I write about here. It doesn’t even look like other Japanese horror films made around the same time - Ju-on and Ringu were made a year or two on either side of it, and they’re much slicker productions. This oddness extends to camerawork that isn’t afraid to be highly artificial. There’s extensive use of wipes, dissolves, double-exposures, even one inventive sequence that turns looking at a photo album into a reverie of stop-motion. The overall effect, then, between the acting and the visuals, is one of a dream that is curdling into a nightmare.

The whole thing is highly impressionistic, and I think a big part of why is that the film is based on a (very good) manga by the horror author Junji Ito, and in some ways the editing and cinematography feel heavily influenced by the visual logic of manga, both in exaggeration of expression, and in the number of sudden, abrupt cuts and vignette-like structuring of the story. Things aren’t literally broken up into panels, but the editing sort of serves them up that way at times, so it’s as much an array of discrete images as anything else. It all serves to keep you slightly wrong-footed even at the best of times, and as things get stranger and stranger, moving into surrealism and body horror as this small town is twisted tighter and tighter on itself, bringing even the skies above into its pull, the result isn’t necessarily frightening, per se - a lot of things that make it really strange also cut into narrative momentum and dispel any tension that might build - but it’s hauntingly strange, stem to stern, and it doesn’t look like anything else I’ve ever seen writing this thing, and those are both really valuable, I think.

IMDB entry
Available on Amazon

Wednesday, September 8, 2021

The Clovehitch Killer: Coming Of Age

Horror films do a better line than you might think in coming-of-age stories, considering that those are often the province of drama. But they tend not to be very subtle. They play to the cheap seats, recasting the physiological changes of adolescence as body horror, or, in the case of something like It, recasting childhood tragedy and abuse as supernatural ordeal. They deal in monsters.

The Clovehitch Killer is very much a coming-of-age story, in the sense that part of coming of age is finding out that your parents are as flawed as any other person. That they aren’t who you thought they were. It’s largely smart and restrained, told at a very human scale, and to its credit, it doesn’t deal in monsters.

The film takes place in Tyson County, Kentucky, in a small town filled with devout, hardworking folks. As an opening voiceover tells us, however, it’s a town with a shadow over it. For several years, the town was terrorized by the predations of the so-called Clovehitch Killer, named for the knot he left behind at every crime scene. He taunted the police, leaving behind a trail of bodies, elaborately bound, tortured, and suffocated to death. Every year, the town holds a memorial for the victims. They aren’t forgotten. Ten victims accounted for, and then ten years ago, the killings just…stopped.

The voiceover belongs to Tyler Burnside. He’s a young man like any other in this small town - a Boy Scout, a churchgoer, a high school student. And he has his eye on a young lady, as a number of teenage boys do, and one night he sneaks his father’s truck out to pick her up for whatever two teenagers do, parked in a car, away from adult supervision. And as things progress, this young lady reaches down and finds a folded-up picture under the seat. A picture taken from a pornographic bondage magazine.

Well, that kills the mood right quick, and soon enough, Tyler develops a reputation as a “pervert.” It’s a small town, so people talk, and it’s a churchgoing town, so people are self-righteous, as Tyler finds out the hard way. More worrisome, though, is what was that doing in his father’s truck?

Tyler’s father, Don Burnside, is every inch the affable family man. He’s married with two kids, he’s a Boy Scout troop leader, active in his church, he calls Tyler “bud” and has an arsenal bristling with dad jokes. He’s starting to feel the aches and pains of age - he’s been a handyman for years and his back acts up a lot. He’s taking care of his brother Rudy, left catatonic by a car accident, and that’s not getting any cheaper. The same problems we all have. And like all of us, he has his secrets - desires he doesn’t tell anyone about, things he doesn’t let anyone else see,

Things he keeps carefully locked away where nobody will look. Private things.

So, with a fair amount of narrative economy, this film sets up a situation where Tyler, bothered by his discovery (and with nobody to turn to), starts becoming more and more curious about what else his father might be hiding, gradually turning up more and more to suggest that maybe his father has much bigger, darker secrets than anyone would expect. The film, for most of its run time, generally does a good job of sustaining tension. The first act is mostly Tyler coming to realize what his father might be and having to go about day-to-day life with him as if everything is normal, and the performance sells it - an excellent example of showing, rather than telling that makes Tyler’s turmoil plain without histrionics. A lot of it also rests on a gradual process of discovery, as Tyler digs deeper and deeper and it gets harder to deny the truth. It’s to the film’s credit that the revelations carry some weight, even if you do have a sense of what they’re going to be. There aren’t a lot of twists and turns (some “oh god he knows/no wait it’s something innocuous” fake-outs, but not enough to become tiresome), more a steadily mounting dread. Anyone who’s spent any amount of time with true crime stories has an idea of what serial killers tend to keep, so it isn’t surprising in that sense, but you really get the feeling of what it’d be like for Tyler to find this stuff and know there’s no other way to explain it. You don’t want him to open that box, or look in the crawlspace, but you know he’s going to and it’s going to be bad.

So the better-than-average treatment of the family man-with-secrets is paired with a better-than-average treatment of the idea of a serial killer as well. As I’ve complained about in the past, serial killers are all too often made into monsters in film. They’re portrayed as criminal masterminds, evil geniuses with a flair for the theatrical, or as implacable, unkillable, masked hulks. And they aren’t monsters. Monsters aren’t real. Serial killers are very real - emotionally stunted narcissists whose lack of basic empathy and malformed desires cost innocent bystanders their lives, and cause uncountable anguish to the friends and families left behind. To turn them into another werewolf or vampire or zombie is massively disrespectful to the people who died at their hands. Real evil should be depicted realistically, and the filmmakers do a very good job here as well. Their fictional killer is based heavily on the case of Dennis Rader, a/k/a the BTK Killer, which keeps everything about as grounded as the world in which this story takes place. These things actually happened.

If anything, there’s a remarkable evenhandedness at work - what the Clovehitch Killer does is portrayed as plainly and matter-of-factly as trips to the grocery store or family dinners are. There are no theatrics, no musical stings or dramatic lighting, just something awful in its simultaneous cruelty and mundanity. And that’s the important point this film makes about serial killers: They aren’t monsters, they aren’t raving lunatics, and you don’t always (or usually) know one when you see one. Often they get away with it for years because they’re citizens, fathers, respectable members of the community, who have invested a great deal of energy into firewalling away the dark impulses they act on. Denial and compartmentalization are powerful coping mechanisms that we use for far less. The idea that the mask of sanity has to slip eventually (or that they’re even insane in the first place) is a fallacy.

Cinematically, one of this film’s strengths is that it isn’t shot like a horror movie. It’s shot like a drama. There’s very little music, and the film is shot in a spare, unadorned, almost utilitarian style. It depicts the events in the lives of these people in this small town, whether that’s going to church, going to school, eating breakfast together, having family game night, engaging in autoerotic asphyxiation, or tying someone else up and suffocating them to death. As I said above, there’s an evenhandedness to this that makes the awful parts somehow even more awful. It’s not an especially violent film, with the exception of the second act, and even that manages to dodge cliche - there’s nothing lurid or gratuitous, it’s just the spare, simple facts of what this killer does, presented unblinkingly. It’s very uncomfortable in its plain depiction, the way lives get snuffed out. Shots are well-composed and clearly lit - again, contrary to horror, a lot happens in the daylight in this film - and the performances are generally solid, the dialogue reasonably believable, though some of the stuff with Tyler and his peers skews into teen-drama territory, to its detriment. The outlines are familiar - Tyler is bothered by what he knows and none of his friends will listen (as much out of denial and fear borne of religious fundamentalism as anything else), so he turns to Kassi, the town misfit, the creepy girl who is obsessed with the Clovehitch murders and (gasp!) doesn’t go to church. It’s a little pro forma, some of the dialogue is pretty corny, and as the film moves on there’s more than a whiff of Encyclopedia Brown about Tyler and Kassi’s relationship.

This turn to the conventional (or maybe just cliched) about halfway through does rob the film of some of its power. The third act is a flashback that shows us events from the second act from a different point of view, and here it takes a turn for the formulaic, and improbable. It’s where the film feels most like a film, and not someone’s story, and characters behave in ways that you don’t in real life. But even then, what follows redeems it to a degree by grappling with something we don’t see in serial-killer films that often - the impact it has on the people who knew the killer all along, and it’s actually pretty touching. The end doesn’t have the impact it could - I think there’s some ambiguity there that distracts from the emotional power of it, but I I don’t know that it ruins it. There are some definite missteps, but there’s also a lot of good here.

The easy criticism for this film (one I’ve seen from professional critics) is that the evidence by a certain point is so overwhelming that there’s no way that someone wouldn’t go to the police, or there’s no way someone would make the decisions they do, but I think that’s the criticism of someone who hasn’t considered the frailty and fallibility of humanity all that closely. Denial is a powerful thing, the willingness to believe other than - anything other than - the obvious is a powerful thing if it means not having to reconsider everything you’d even held to be true. Everyone would rather just believe in the father, the husband, the churchgoer, the family man, especially in a small town. Learning otherwise is the kind of thing that makes you grow up in a hurry, and that’s not something most people want to face.

IMDB entry
Available on Netflix
Available on Hulu
Available on Amazon

Wednesday, September 1, 2021

Hold The Dark: The Wolf In Man

If you look into the eyes of a predator, like a shark or a wolf, you see nothing reflected back. No intelligence, no recognition, no connection. Their eyes are utterly blank, and their minds unknowable. Their frame of reference is not ours, and though they are creatures of this earth, they are completely alien. There is no understanding there.

I’ve watched a decent number of films that deal with nature at its most implacable and merciless, films that go on to draw connections and comparisons between animal and human predators, but I don’t know that I’ve watched one that so fully embodies that thesis as much as Hold The Dark does. It’s somber, relentlessly grim, taking that unknowability and extending it into the world of humans.

This begins as the story of Medora Slone, a woman who lives in the remote Alaskan village of Keelut. It’s a very small, very poor village whose inhabitants never really recovered from the loss of two of their children, taken by wolves. It is a village draped in bitterness and despair, a dark place where the sun rises at 10:30am and sets by 3:30pm. And now, Medora’s son Bailey is the third child to be taken. She writes to a naturalist named Russell Core, an expert on wolf behavior who has some expertise in tracking down wolves who have taken children. She doesn’t expect Bailey to still be alive, but she wants Core to find the wolf that took him and kill it. It’s simple: She’s a mother, and she wants revenge. Her husband is far away, fighting in the Iraqi desert, and she wants to have something to show for all their tragedy when he comes home.

And then her husband comes home, and everything changes.

It’s an odd sort of comparison, but this film sort of feels to me like The Sweet Hereafter by way of a Jim Thompson novel. The people of Keelut have largely given up on life, paralyzed by their grief, and that comes out in different ways in different people - sometimes resignation, sometimes contempt, sometimes violent rage. It begins as one type of story, but then things take a turn, or several turns, really, and does so very quickly. It isn’t long before Core, our putative protagonist, ends up less an investigator and more a bystander witnessing everything that follows, as if something inexorable has been set into motion.

It’s a cold, wintry film - not just in the monolithically forbidding Alaska landscape, but also in the people, and the pacing. Medora is a ghost, pale and withdrawn, barely speaking above a whisper but every word brimming with rage. Russell is reticent, quiet, a man whose life has estranged him from his wife and daughter for reasons that are never really articulated. He’s reluctant to do what Medora asks, but he wants to help. The dialogue comes slowly and haltingly, with lots of air in between words and sentences. Almost everyone is taciturn, because there’s not much to say out here in the middle of nowhere. The homes we visit are, for the most part, crude and ramshackle, tacked together from scrap wood and plastic sheeting. There may be heating, but there’s little warmth, and the resentment the largely-indigenous population of Keelut feels for the White police officers who’ve come in from town is palpable. The pace suits this mood - it’s slow and deliberate, with long stretches of quiet punctuated by sudden, startling upheavals of violence. Much like nature itself, everything is stillness interrupted by blood. And it is definitely a violent film, with death coming quick, sharp, and unsentimental whether by man or beast (if there’s a distinction to be made, which this film suggests maybe there isn’t). It’s matter-of-fact and spares few. Someone’s alive, then they aren’t. The camera doesn’t linger, but nor does it look away.

There’s something elusive about this film - you think it’s going to be one thing, and then it’s another, but then it’s not really that either. The dialogue is spare (except for Medora, who waxes spookily lyrical) and we have to glean a lot from conversation, read between the lines and pay attention to subtle allusion and what goes unsaid. There are hints of mysticism and ancient mystery as indigenous beliefs collide with more rational explanations, and the film doesn’t really affirms one narrative more than another. There’s not a lot of overt exposition here, and so we’re left with the feeling that there are unsolved mysteries or untold stories just beyond our grasp as the film ends. That can be compelling, and it is here at points, but at other points, especially toward the climax, it tends to feel a little baffling and disappointing as well. Again, you think you know what it’s about, but it’s not that after all, so you’re left wondering what it was all for, and though that’s even forecasted by one of the characters early on when they say that they may never know the real answers, there’s something about it that gnaws at you once it’s over. There’s a lot of ambition here, and it’s well-directed, but this reliance on mystery, on elliptical storytelling, and on preserving the unknowability of nature does leave it feeling somewhat attenuated and distant in the final analysis.

On the other hand, it’s beautifully realized, with gorgeous cinematography - lots of shows of sun breaking through cracks in the clouds, mountain ranges, expanses of forests contrasted with the ramshackle villages and camps stuck into the wilderness in spite of its best efforts to shake them off. It’s largely dark or overcast, exteriors mostly drained of color and interiors mostly lit by lamplight. The soundtrack is largely ambient, as gray and forbidding as the world it scores. The people are more characters than fully fleshed-out individuals, but not to the detriment of the story. You get a sense of them and what matters to them, and though most people in this film are remote or unknowable, that sort of seems to be the point. There are occasional flashes of humanity, warmth among the cold, but in the end you don’t get any clear answers as to why everything that’s happened went down the way it did. The people of this world are as unknowable as the wolves that haunt the edges of the story. Spend long enough in the wilderness, this film says, and you will come to have more in common with the wilderness than you do other people.

IMDB entry
Available on Netflix