Wow!
The performances here are first rate!
Dylan La Ray, as Billy Cochran, and Lynn Lowry, as Billy's mother, Gina Cochran, bring strong skill, believability and nuance to this small but important film. Jess Paul, as Myra Valenti, Mrs. Cochran's caretaker and Billy's friend, also delivers a first rate performance.
Billy Cochran is a lonely 23 year old whose dad died young. He works a mind numbing job at a meat packing plant and comes home to a dingy Chicago apartment, where he tends to his aging, ailing mother. Once free from work and home responsibilities, Billy likes to draw, building elaborate alternate worlds and species in his art-notebook. But Mother is never far away, and yes, there are shades of Psycho here, as Billy's creative time is constantly interrupted by Mom's extreme neediness.
As Billy's mother slips ever deeper int late stage Alzheimer's she becomes emotionally abusive. This emotional and verbal abuse, along with a plot device that I won't mention so not to reveal any spoilers, cause Billy to begin his own slow slide into despair.
Dylan's ability to show us Billy's growing torment is truly remarkable, and Gina is simply stunning in her seamless switches through a massive range of human emotions, sometimes all in the same scene, with a face that goes from sweet and maternal to twisted and sinister at the flip of a switch.
Mood and tone are ominous, pushed along by very creepy soundtrack. Setting and locations are gritty urban rust, and Billy's transformation into something "other" seems all too real.
My only beef would be with the hard nosed boss. I believe this plot line could have been better developed. That said, this is an indie horror film on a budget, there's never enough time/money for everything; concentrating on that which matters most is what works.
Fang is a worthy film from Richard Burgin, an important new writer/director. I look forward to seeing what he does next!