A strange woman comes to Texas to meet her half-sister and stake a claim to the family music legacy-one way or another.A strange woman comes to Texas to meet her half-sister and stake a claim to the family music legacy-one way or another.A strange woman comes to Texas to meet her half-sister and stake a claim to the family music legacy-one way or another.
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I have always enjoyed those Flannery O'Connor stories where a visitor "changes things." So, too, is writer/co-director Jason Courtland's (with co-director Julia Halperin) Barracuda, about a young woman, Sinaloa (Sophie Reid), who visits her half sister, Merle (Alison Tolman) in Austin for the first time. Sinaola does change things but not as fast as you might expect nor as clearly as I would like.
However, I may ask too much because family connections are never straightforward, dealing as we do with layers of biology and experience. In Barracuda (the fish depicted on her dad's guitar and an apt metaphor for her), Sinaloa can barely be accepted into the family, even with her talent and knowledge of her deceased dad's music.
Country, bluegrass, and folk music are interwoven with the slow disclosure of the legacies, e.g., dad was "a drunk, a drug addict and a cheater." She's suspected of falsely claiming kinship or arriving to cut herself into the inheritance, which could be considerable given the parcel of land the family owns. Yet, really, most of them, especially her half-sister, are just trying to figure out why she's there and where she's going.
The film is successful not letting us deeply onto Sinaloa's psyche except for a flash of her occasional discomfort at family interactions or Merle's suspicious and unlikable mother, Patricia (JoBeth Williams). Slowly, very slowly, Sinaloa's true character and intentions become clearer. Most everything relates to her exclusion from the family--her resolution is dramatic but not surprising.
No surprise that Bruce Beresford is a producer of this film, he the director of Tender Mercies, a milder rendition of this film's underlying family disabilities. Like bloodline and family in real life, this thriller has few certainties, exacerbated by the visitor who changes things.
If you're patient, you'll enjoy one of the year's oddest and most perplexing indies.
However, I may ask too much because family connections are never straightforward, dealing as we do with layers of biology and experience. In Barracuda (the fish depicted on her dad's guitar and an apt metaphor for her), Sinaloa can barely be accepted into the family, even with her talent and knowledge of her deceased dad's music.
Country, bluegrass, and folk music are interwoven with the slow disclosure of the legacies, e.g., dad was "a drunk, a drug addict and a cheater." She's suspected of falsely claiming kinship or arriving to cut herself into the inheritance, which could be considerable given the parcel of land the family owns. Yet, really, most of them, especially her half-sister, are just trying to figure out why she's there and where she's going.
The film is successful not letting us deeply onto Sinaloa's psyche except for a flash of her occasional discomfort at family interactions or Merle's suspicious and unlikable mother, Patricia (JoBeth Williams). Slowly, very slowly, Sinaloa's true character and intentions become clearer. Most everything relates to her exclusion from the family--her resolution is dramatic but not surprising.
No surprise that Bruce Beresford is a producer of this film, he the director of Tender Mercies, a milder rendition of this film's underlying family disabilities. Like bloodline and family in real life, this thriller has few certainties, exacerbated by the visitor who changes things.
If you're patient, you'll enjoy one of the year's oddest and most perplexing indies.
This got listed as "Horror" on Amazon, it's not even a thriller. The movie is terrible...When it's over all you say is "I WASTED 1 HR AND 40 MINUTES ON NOTHING" Since NOTHING in this movie happens....
An American thriller; A story about a young British woman who comes to Austin, Texas, to find her half-sister by way of their dead country musician father, and before long doubts are erased and chaos takes hold. There is an intriguing ambiguity to the stranger who rolls into town. Pent-up anger, pain, and defiance bubbles below the surface but never froths over into anything palpable, and refreshingly we are spared verbal conflict and manipulation and simplistic resolutions. The story creates empathy for the young woman as she tries to establish a connection to her new, foreign family. However, while engrossing and edgy, it fails to produce a vice-like grip on the viewer by the end. Instead, we get graphic violence in place of motive. Still, it is a smart, tense movie with two good performances, which make it just about work.
The acting was good as was the camera work.
The directing was also good.
The film while very professional was very weird.
It failed to capture excitement and frankly, it could have been switched off at any time.
It appears to have been written by someone with a sick distorted mind.
If you do weird sick, this is a film fore you.
But that twangy country music and the dancing without rhythm rednecks was too much to bear, so FF was a blessing. It also came in handy with the bar scene with those two derelicts trying to make a move on Sinaloa and her sister who did the right thing for a change and sent these two packing. Sometimes these writer just cannot make a movie without certain idiocies incorporated into them.
I do however agree that the writers might have suffered from writers block when it came to the last 1/3 of this flick. I understand how Sinaloa would despise her half-sister's mother, she was a Biotch with a capital B. But the fight and strangulation was a bit much. And unexpected, I was more in line with something that would awaken Merle from being walked over by everyone in her immediate circle, and especially her mother followed by the gold digging fiance Raul who was more concerned about the finances and not her mental health.
Good movie, but did have some let downs in the writing department.
I do however agree that the writers might have suffered from writers block when it came to the last 1/3 of this flick. I understand how Sinaloa would despise her half-sister's mother, she was a Biotch with a capital B. But the fight and strangulation was a bit much. And unexpected, I was more in line with something that would awaken Merle from being walked over by everyone in her immediate circle, and especially her mother followed by the gold digging fiance Raul who was more concerned about the finances and not her mental health.
Good movie, but did have some let downs in the writing department.
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Details
- Runtime
- 1h 40m(100 min)
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 1.85 : 1
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