It Follows
Dir. David Robert Mitchell
3 out of 5
Dir. David Robert Mitchell
3 out of 5
We all know what happens to
the sexually promiscuous (or even just the sexually active) in horror films: once
the clothes come off, a grisly death usually isn't far behind. The teen
chiller It Follows, from
writer-director David Robert Mitchell, magnifies this trope to movie size:
after teenage Jay (The Guest’s Maika
Monroe) sleeps with the older boy (Jake Weary) she's been dating, she's
haunted by spectral visions taking the form of various people, often
creepy-looking and disturbingly mutilated strangers. Jay's lover has the
courtesy to explain, post-coitus, that it's a condition passed down a long line
of sex partners and that his only motive in courting her was to rid himself of
the curse, as the visions will relentlessly hunt down and kill the most recent
link in the chain.
It wouldn't take much to
push this premise into exploitation territory, but Mitchell takes it in a more
introspective direction, trying to examine the impact Jay's situation has on
her relationship with her friends: younger sister Kelly (Lili Sepe), schoolmate
Yara (Olivia Luccardi), bad-boy neighbor Greg (Daniel Zovatto), and childhood
crush Paul (Keir Gilchrist). Only the afflicted can see the visions, so
they spend much of their time consoling Jay without knowing exactly why.
Jay herself is a fascinating character, contemplating the morality of her
limited options in relieving herself of the curse. Together, they all
perform the duties of friendship in a sensitive interplay that would feel very
realistic for a conventional coming-of-age drama, much less a horror film.
The premise lends itself to
a metaphor for teen sex, one that Mitchell complicates with the ever-changing
form of Jay's tormentors and the detail that they will only pursue their
victims slowly, on foot. They're never a powerfully overwhelming force
but a consistent creeping dread in the back of Jay's mind. What she is
interpreting, Mitchell cannot truly say. His script mines a motherlode of
mental triggers, from post-pubescent confusion and anxiety about sex to a
recalling of the emotional scars left by our earliest intimate relationships,
even suggesting a component based on the repression of sexual trauma.
The last thing this movie
needs is a moral, but it seems to be grasping at a larger purpose that is not
made fully clear. Granted, that's Mitchell's likely intention, but his
lyrical approach short-sells the potential of the conceit. He delights in
constructing a formal mystery house of atmospheric slow zooms, pans that lead
to nowhere, and nerve-fraying sound design. It's top-notch horror movie
affect. It's also pretty frustrating without the right amount of payoff.
It Follows becomes a slow-speed chase film for almost
its entire second half, a repetitive exercise no matter how many times the nightmare
changes its disguise. Mitchell's gift for wan understatement also doesn't
mesh well with a young cast struggling to communicate the film's intensely
psychological conflict. It Follows is ultimately a great
idea resting upon a wobbly framework, trying mightily to strike its own
balance between the codification and deconstruction of horror tropes.
This review was originally posted to Screen Invasion.
This review was originally posted to Screen Invasion.
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