Showing posts with label weird. Show all posts
Showing posts with label weird. Show all posts

Wednesday, May 26, 2021

In the Earth (2021)

Warning: there are structural spoilers coming your way!

During a global pandemic outbreak, biologist Martin Lowery (Joel Fry) comes to a scientific outpost bordering a humungous arboreal forest. He is tasked with helping with the sample work of Dr Olivia Wendle (Hayley Squires). Though that’s not the only – or central – reason he has come, for, as we will eventually learn, he once had a relationship with Wendle, and was still exchanging regular letters with her. Letters that some day just stopped. Which, as it turns out, is not the only thing that has stopped in the last six months or so: Wendle hasn’t had any contact with her colleagues at the border of the forest either, except for dropping off samples in collection boxes in the woods, and has spent the time smack dab in the middle of the forest in her own camp.

That’s where Martin is bound now, accompanied by park ranger Alma (Ellora Torchia). For city guy Martin, having to travel two days through the forest would be bad enough, but on their first night, someone attacks them, smashes their radio and steals their shoes. Fortunately, they soon meet Zach (Reece Shearsmith), who apparently lives in the woods as a hermit. He seems helpful enough with food, drink and shoes, but you know how these things can go.

And that’s really not at all everything Ben Wheatley’s COVID lockdown-production has to offer. In fact, for much of its running time, In the Earth shifts and transforms between or through different horror or weird subgenres, until it eventually arrives at looking at folk horror through a somewhat Nigel Kneale-ish lens.

At first, all this shifting and not quite committing to sub-genres and their respective tropes makes the movie somewhat hard to grasp. In fact, I did initially get the impression of a film not quite willing to commit to anything and mostly interested in going through a kind of scrap book of Wheatley’s pop cultural interests and obsessions. Once the film arrived in its final stage, all that shifting through different genres actually began to make sense as absolutely necessary part of the film’s structure, for this is one of those folk horror movies that really aims to funnel its audience through the concrete stages of the enacted ritual together with the characters, where everything we see is indeed part of a calculated ritual. Though, unlike in Wheatley’s other great folk horror film Kill List, this ritual is not necessarily one enacted through and by human agency, even when the human agents seem to think that it is. Audience and characters alike are in the hands of something bigger and more difficult to understand, and something most certainly not human. Which, in the case of this film doesn’t necessarily mean it to be a destructive or malevolent power – just one whose interests may be very different from our human ones.

Tellingly enough, the genre shifts here are always moving away from the more human centric interests of survival horror and torture porn towards the weird and the abstract, through the sort of psychedelic trip footage Wheatley so obviously loves until we arrive at an evocation of the isolation and strangeness of nature and the dangers of trying to explain it on human terms. Particularly the second half of the film is full of brilliant shots, making use of very simple visual techniques (strobe lights, limited lighting, and so on), a great Clint Mansell soundtrack and pretty fantastic old school British science fiction sound design, all in service of emphasising how strange the natural world and what might be behind/below/in it actually are.

All of which is of course like catnip to me, and pretty much makes this my favourite Wheatley movie since Kill List – and most of his films in between were great.

Wednesday, August 27, 2008

Hex (1973)

In the USA between the wars a gang of war veteran bikers led by Whizzer (Keith Carradine) and including a young Gary Busey and a nearly fresh-faced Scott Glenn rides through the Midwest, purportedly on their way to California (where else?), in truth just moving to not to have to stay somewhere. A little mass brawl doesn't make them a lot of friends in a small Nebraskan town.

They hide themselves on the farm of the sisters Rio (Christina Rains) and Cacia (Hilary Thompson), without asking properly, of course. Still, their first evening goes comparably well, especially the part where the sisters introduce the men to the art of weed smoking (of which Gary Busey does not approve).

Sadly said non-weed-smoker Busey later tries to force himself on the younger sister Cacia. To the happiness of B-movie friends everywhere he doesn't succeed. The rest of the gang is not all that bad, you see.

Alas Rio can't let the thing rest and puts a hex on Busey. Well, at least it will probably be the only owl-induced death in his career.

Busey won't be the last victim of Rio's interesting code of morals, of course. It doesn't help the health of the bikers either that Rio sees killing off Whizzer's friends as the best way into his heart. Whatever happened to love potions? But who am I to criticize methods that lead directly into one of the stranger happy ends I have seen?

Hex is the kind of silently (if you can ignore the kazoo-based soundtrack) weird movie that was only possible in the Seventies. It's one of these small one-off projects made by people who would go on to work exclusively on television; as far away as possible from the one interesting moment in their careers, I sometimes think.

I hesitate to call Hex an artistic success. After all, I am not at all sure what the film was supposed to achieve. It is very definitely not a horror film, although it has two or three scenes that are effectively horrific. It's not a comedy, either. There are quite a few funny moments on screen, but just as many moments that are just inexplicable. Hex also features some very typical early Seventies sentiments, ranging from the ironic pot-smoking to a romanticized love for "the simple life". The latter is nicely undermined by the way the simple life turns out not to be all that simple and some strangely poignant moments when life in a place that hasn't changed much since the days of the Old West and the undeniable modernity of motorcycles and airplanes come together.

All in all it's a very confusing, but also a very interesting picture. Just don't go in and expect it to make sense.