Friday, March 31, 2017

The Monster (2016)

Score: 4.5 / 5

Lizzy has had enough of her mother. During her times in Kathy's custody, she finds herself a victim of alcohol-fueled abuse and a nurse, cleaning up afterward and caring for sloppy mommy. We see episodic scenes from their life together that range from borderline tolerance to unmitigated loathing, when Kathy's intoxicated rage manifests in verbal and physical violence. A central scene comes to mind, in which Kathy lets out a string of expletives (August: Osage County-style) at Lizzy in the driveway before getting in her car and abandoning the child. At the beginning of this movie, however, it seems the two have reached a breaking point, and a hungover Kathy drives Lizzy home to her dad, for what may be a final time.

The family drama seems to come to a head when their car breaks down on a lonely stretch of forested road. Of course the deep of night and intermittent rainfall restricts the duo from exiting the vehicle, and their uncomfortable situation feels more oppressive by the second. The slow-drip of toxicity between the two is sure to reach a blistering climax. But just when we think we've pegged Kathy as the titular monster, the shadows beyond the headlights take on a sinister shape.

Writer/director Bryan Bertino (you may remember his seminal creation The Strangers in 2008) once again shows off his mad skills in The Monster, and though it falls short of his breakthrough film, this one is a beast of a different color. Deceptively simple, it marries isolation thriller with monster horror in a grim, meditative family drama that utilizes the narrative of myth or urban legend. It's "about" the survival of mother and daughter. It's "about" the nature of monstrosity in a postmodern world, where even those who come to help (a repair mechanic and an EMT team) are collateral damage. It's "about" feminist refusal to be victimized. It's "about" the monstrous effects of alcoholism.

Too many claims? Try again. It's not any old breakdown that stops our ladies' progress on the road: Their car strikes a wolf. How many times does that happen in fiction? Rocks, logs, nails, deer, cows, sure, but a wolf? Actually, I can only think of wolves stopping young women as living predators in extensions of the story of Little Red Riding Hood. Hell, even last week's Beauty and the Beast is a prime example of that. And while the wolf here fulfills its function in stopping the girls' journey in the woods, they also almost immediately kill it. A subtle subversion, but an important one. The wolf serves yet another purpose beyond plot and theme: foreshadowing. Its presence suggests a greater predator in the forest, one that might have left the deep wounds on its torso, and one that might return for dinner.

It's not a lengthy movie, but Bertino milks the suspense for every last chill. Much like our experience in The Blair Witch Project, we begin to see the monster well before it appears in every shadow and behind the atmospheric veil. When it does at last venture into the light, we see a beast that looks vaguely like Alien, its shiny, leathery skin stretched batlike between its muscled limbs and a nightmarish head riddled with enormous teeth. It's a grimy regurgitation of Kathy's alcoholism, a foul specter that is unmistakably an incarnation of brutish overindulgence.

Of course it's a blatant symbol for the monster Kathy must face to restore her bond with Lizzy, but before you criticize the heavyhanded storytelling, most cinematic horror does correspond to reality. Do your homework. More specifically here, the case could be made that the monster is little more than an extension of Kathy's psyche, a manifestation of the evil in the woods of her life preventing a loving connection with her family. Like in The Babadook or It Follows, like in The Brood or even The Exorcist, we are left questioning the parallels. Is the monster (visible or invisible, external or internal) a literal product of the characters' turmoil, a symbolic examination of the sins in question, or an unrelated external form of evil that incites the drama of the film? Could it be all in one? One might wonder if it even matters, but the lens through which we view any movie will change our interpretation of it as well as our reaction to it.

Zoe Kazan plays mother dear, and her performance is an awesome display of her talent. Bertino's screenplay daringly challenges our suppositions about addiction's power over even the primal bond between mother and daughter. More impressive, he's willing to work with Kazan to make Kathy just a terrible person. As a raging boozehound and old-fashioned scream queen, she electrifies the screen with her presence. Incredibly, she avoids playing into the extensive symbolism of the film, imbuing her character with gritty realism and grounded vulnerability. Bertino's daring screenplay depicts Kathy as a terrible person. Kazan ultimately plays a harrowing journey of truth, fighting for the life of her child in a fierce crawl to redemption against horrific odds. Earlier scenes of cruelty and hatred are switched for heartrending love as Kathy and Lizzy take turns protecting and comforting each other. Ella Ballentine is no less fabulous as the fierce Lizzy, wise and brave, unafraid of confrontation and determined to stand up for herself and eventually her mother.

Of course, it's also pretty cool that even when The Monster is thrilling and chilling us -- it's far more a mood piece than a rip-roar scare-fest -- it affirms its characters' humanity and our own investment in their redemption.

IMDb: The Monster

No comments:

Post a Comment