Directed by: Ole Bornedal
Horror, 2012
USA/Canada, 92min
Many many years ago, there was a little movie that scared
the pants off its audience, and showcased some of Denmark’s most promising
talent. A young Kim Bodina and an even younger Nikolaj Coster-Waldau saw their
breakthroughs in Ole Bornedal’s first feature (not counting his two earlier TV
movies) Nattevagten (Nightwatch) 1994. The critics loved this dark thriller
with obvious horror traits and solid performances, as it won a variety of
global awards and became an international success. Bornedal finally made his
way to Hollywood and even saw his breakthrough success remade at his own hands
as Nightwatch with a star cast of Ewan McGregor, Patricia Arquette, Josh Brolin
and Nick Nolte… Big, bucks, big names, big trouble…
Never the less, Ole Bornedal, has constantly released movies
every now and again, and they are well worth the time checking out, and several
of them are well awarded pieces. So what should to expect when one starts to
watch a possession film directed by the guy responsible for one of the finest
Scandinavian genre films ever?
Well it goes something like this… starting off with a
classic “based on a true story” moniker Bornedal wastes no time at all as he
establishes the threat of this piece, a wooden box. Or rather the contents of
same wooden box, which contains a sinister power so strong and evil, that it
makes the old woman who’s about to smash it with a hammer twist and turn
violently as she flips and flops around the floor before smashing her face into
the glass table.
Gym teacher and divorced father of two Clyde [Jeffrey Dean
Morgon], has his two adolescent daughters for the weekend. It starts off as a
great weekend, as he surprise them by taking them to his brand new house,
sharing a pizza, complaining over IKEA assembly instructions and visiting a
yard sale to pick up stuff for his new pad. It’s at this yard sale that Emily,
also known as Em finds a wooden casket with strange carvings on the outside of
the box. Yup, you guessed it, it’s the same wooden casket from that demonic
opening, and to make sure we really understood the connection, the old woman-
now severely bandaged and beaten starts to scream at Em when she sees her with
the casket from her sickbed by the window…
So far it’s been established that Clyde is a great dad,
doing his best, and he also has a fairly good relationship with his wife Stephanie
[Kyra Sedgewick]. It’s fair to assume that there’s a longing for reconciliation
between the two, especially in the way they interact with each other at the
hospital, and in a strange moment when Clyde helps Stephanie delete a spicy home
video from her computer…
All right, we know that these are all good folks, well,
perhaps not so much Stephanie as she’s already got her new boyfriend, posh high end
dentist Brett [Grant Snow] on frequent visits, which bothers Clyde… She’s
clearly moved on, and he’s still hurting… See it’s all trickery to help us empathise
with him! So with the real world established, the horror can kick in. A force
of antagonism has been established, a family with values has been presented,
now time to demolish their ordinary world and turn it into a nightmare ridden
one instead.
So let’s get to the scares… Emily opens the box and discovers
the contents within, Bornedal continues to explore the family as the possession
starts. Dead moths from the box come to life, strange contents awaken our
imaginations, and through dialogue we learn how the girls really feel about their
parents divorce. Cue classic weird possessed behavior and strange midnight events here, some which are really neat, some just to generic to cause any effect. There’s also a sinister little subplot where Clyde is up for a
possible job in a different state, hence “abandoning” his daughters.
Act two starts with metaphoric “Loss of control” as Clyde
discovers his eldest daughter now has braces to straighten out her “disfigured”
teeth, braces suggested by their mothers new boyfriend, and dentist, Brett.
It’s the first time Clyde really reacts to something, and this is merely the
beginning of the shift into the unnatural world. Second is the obvious one, his
youngest daughter, owner of the strange wooden box Emily, starts acting
strange. Where they previously had a beautiful and touching relationship, it
changes drastically when the possession starts.
Bornedal takes us to horror convention country. Swarms of
moths, small child blurting out potty-mouthed catchphrases, walking weirdly, and
growling deeply. The malicious demon may not necessary affect its host, Em, but
it certainly does have its vicious ways with those who interfere with Emily and
the bond to the demon. Violent death is waiting! What’s interesting is the
decision to go with something else than the classic catholic guilt trip and Old
Nick lurking in the shadows. The Possession sees Jewish religion being at the
core, the box has Hebrew inscriptions and the monster is a Dibbuk, an unruly demon
from Jewish folklore. A spot of cool casting sees Matisyahu the Hasidic
reggae/rock musician as the bold exorcist that dares take on this evil force no
other rabbi will go near.
The Possession may not be super scary, but it is a rather
original story, and if nothing else Bornedal gets some fine, solid
performances out of his cast. It’s interesting to see a possession movie that
takes a different path than the usual one taken when the devil haunts the victims.
The movie moves slow and builds some decent characters, even though Grant
Snow’s Brett get’s off a bit too easy, and you know from square one that the whole
movie will build towards one climactic exorcism, although this one may surprise
you as it takes something of a different path there too! At the end of the day,
it’s all about family values and how the resurrection of the American nuclear
family is a must… oh and last minute twists of fate.
All in all, an entertaining little piece that proves that Bornedal
still has it, he can still tell a decent creepy story, an entertaining popcorn
horror, but also that studios still care more about cash than presenting genre
fans with a terrifying ride. There are two versions of The Possession, make sure
you watch the R-Rated version and not the seriously watered down PG-13 version.
2 comments:
Yeah! This was a cool flick! I can also recommend "Fräls oss ifrån ondo" if you haven't seen that one yet.
I haven't heard of that one, but I may have to check it out then! :)
Cheers!
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