It Follows is a
Skinner box for horror nostalgists of a certain vintage. It provokes an
unconscious reaction in the genre pleasure centers of those of us pining for
vintage John Carpenter craftsmanship, with a healthy respect for old school Val
Lewton chills. Its set-up finds the margins of suburbia infected with
paranormal stalking a la 80’s shockers. Its pay-off borrows from Cat People’s famous pool scene. This is
like a handful of recent horror efforts that gather up strong dread with
throwback appeal, eschewing modern shocks and CGI for something simpler and
more elemental. Look at James Wan’s The
Conjuring, Adam Wingard’s The Guest,
and Ti West’s The Innkeepers for other
recent movies that wouldn’t have been out of place on Blockbuster’s shelves with
the (superior) likes of Halloween and
Nightmare on Elm Street.
Like those, there’s video-store classicism in writer-director David Robert Mitchell’s approach to It Follows, an art-house meets midnight movie genre effort. He
brings a resourceful simplicity to the tension and concept. He makes frames
full of ominous negative space, implying danger in even normal moments. He pins
his characters unsteadily off-center in the shots, Rich Vreeland’s driving
synth-soaked score adding to the unease. Long steady widescreen compositions
from cinematographer Mike Gioulakis looking down ordinary sunny suburban
streets allow the suspense to take its sweet time inevitably dredging up dread.
As it unspooled, I could almost see a retro pulpy tagline: You can run, but you
can’t hide, because…IT FOLLOWS.
But what is the “it” in question? It’s unclear, remaining
vaguely defined throughout, but it is certainly plenty menacing anyway. Maika
Monroe, who appears haunted even before she gets cursed, plays a teen who hooks up with her sketchy new boyfriend (Jake Weary).
He promptly disappears, but not before holding her captive and telling her he’s
cursed with something deadly. “I passed it to you,” he warns. “It” is a deadly paranormal
stalker, able to take the form of anyone. Maybe it’s that old lady striding
across the quad. Or is it the creepy kid next door? Or perhaps it’s the tall,
dead-eyed man slowly moving down a dark hallway? The “It” is only visible to
those with the curse, a ghostly presence at once familiar and fearful, walking
forward unshakably. You can run, but it’ll find you, and it’ll kill you.
There’s some close association with Mitchell’s first film,
2011’s tender drama The Myth of the
American Sleepover, which followed a group of teens in suburban Detroit as
they fumbled through adolescent concerns over the course of one night. It Follows takes place in the same
neighborhoods, amongst its lead’s tight group of friends (Olivia Luccardi, Lili
Sepe, Keir Gilchrist) and the boy next door (Daniel Zovatto), as they struggle
to help her. They see only her trauma, as she nervously looks around, cringing
with the fear of the mysterious something stalking her. They don’t quite
believe her, but are willing to help her. It’s a standard horror perspective, a
group of young people slowly dragged into paranoid fears. Mitchell pays close
attention to the worrying mood enveloping them, drawing suspense out of
quotidian hangouts by the ways concern shifts their interactions.
Artfully slow and deliberately (perhaps frustratingly)
unresolved, this is a horror picture refusing to be pinned down. The mutable,
unknowable nature of the curse –a sort of supernatural STD – has an
anesthetized inevitability. Like a slow-motion Freudian Final Destination, It follows a set of rules, passing danger down
the line. You can put It off your trail by passing It on, but once It kills the next victim, It’ll return for you. There are a couple great scares
involving a figure in the far background of a shot slowly creeping closer to
our vulnerable victims in the foreground. Effective modulation of tone brings
sudden apparitions just when you think it’s safe. Creepiness is maximized by
the unresolved loose ends, mingling unfortunate retrograde slasher-style sex
fears with the haunting feeling of regret over a mistake. It can’t be undone.
It will follow forever.
No comments:
Post a Comment