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Fantasia 2024: The Chapel, The Beast Within, FAQ

Children often make for effective horror (or other genre) protagonists — after all, they can serve as a representation of our collective innocence, the purity of life that forces both worldly and otherworldly can corrupt or threaten. But they also offer a more honest, open lens by which to view the vagaries of adulthood: our cynicism, our faults, the pressures we visit upon them. These three titles out of this year’s Fantasia Film Festival aren’t all works of children in danger, but they do let us look at the sins of parenthood and society through new wide-eyed lenses.

Fresh off her invigorating feature debut “Piggy,” Spanish filmmaker Carlota Pereda returns with “The Chapel,” a decidedly atmospheric supernatural drama that echoes the early works of Guillermo del Toro (“The Devil’s Backbone,” “Chronos”). Set in a remote Spanish town, “The Chapel” opens in 1631 by telling us the story of the Black Plague, in which plague doctors dressed in crow-like masks would scour the town looking for the sick, locking them in the town chapel to spare the rest from disease. One of the most tragic victims of this is Uxoa (Alba Hernández), a young girl who’s ripped from her mother’s arms screaming. Then, as Pereda’s camera pans, we see a bystander holding up a smartphone; we’ve been watching a reenactment, a clever transition from the past to the present.

It’s a testament to Pereda’s stately, atmospheric direction, a vision preoccupied with seeing and belief and the links between generations, which fuels the mother-daughter melodrama of its primary story. You see, every year the town opens up the titular chapel for five days as a tourist destination — complete with rituals performed by local medium Ivana Peralta (Nagore Aranburu). One problem: the night of the festival, Ivana is found dead of natural causes by eight-year-old Emma (Maia Zaitegi), her young apprentice. 

Emma is herself preemptively haunted, as her mother (Loreto Mauleón) is dying of cancer in hospice; she’s desperate to learn the secrets of channeling the dead so that, after her mother dies, she can still reach her. With Ivana gone, her only hope is the medium’s daughter, Carol (Belén Rueda), who herself only performs cheap palm readings and flimflam shows for money. She doesn’t believe in the supernatural, which makes her a decidedly cynical guardian for the wide-eyed child.

From there, Pereda shuffles us along a suitably moody and well-performed ghostly drama that earns points for atmosphere but loses itself when it comes time to actually perform horror. Most of the scares come when Emma reads her Latin-laden book of smells, and without fail, her tummy aches and maggot-covered plague doctors come to try to snatch her away. It’s effective at first, but then gets repetitive, and the fiery climax within the chapel itself is a bit too hazy to really work. 

The lead performances are superlative, though: Rueda makes for a suitably pouty parental figure, eyes boring holes in everyone she meets through a face half-scarred by burns. But Zaitegi is a revelation, a beautifully cherubic figure who carries the pathos of her impending loss with unenviable pain. There’s a desperation to her behavior surrounding a dying parent that echoes J.A. Bayona’s deeply slept-on “A Monster Calls,” though its emotional highs don’t quite reach those peaks. 

A less effective brush with the supernatural comes with Alexander J. Farrell’s “The Beast Within,” a too-hazy-by-half childhood fable about a young girl named Willow (Caoilinn Springall) glimpsing the collapse of her family through innocent eyes. She lives out in the English countryside with her mother Imogen (Ashleigh Cummings) and father Noah (Kit Harington), while her grandfather (James Cosmo) watches on coolly on occasion. Willow is afflicted with an unnamed illness that requires an oxygen tank, which leaves her to witness the dissolution of her parents’ relationship through the hazy windows of their ornate country estate. Every so often, Noah’s facade of kindness gives way to bursts of aggression; every few nights, she sees her parents drive him away or search for him in the woods. One night, she dares to follow them and sees the truth: Noah is a werewolf, and his disease is tearing their family apart.

Farrell’s approach is almost too dreamlike, and some of the more interesting aspects of the film’s central metaphor (e.g., the lycanthrope-as-alcoholic-father) get lost in all the subjective haze. (He cut his fangs as a documentarian, which maybe explains the doubling-down on atmosphere over narrative.) The fairy tale trappings are exquisitely clear, with its patient shots of characters gazing wordlessly at each other, the camera offering a child’ s-eye view of all the moodily lit forests and crumbled stone edifices. But its charms wear off quickly, especially in a lilting second act that’s a bit too patient in exploring the dynamics we’ve long since established. Its creature-feature bona fides are clear, including some suitably visceral transformation effects that flash so quickly in the moonlit night they barely register. But apart from its domestic-drama angle, “The Beast Within” offers little to spice up its folkloric origins.

And now for something a little sunnier: A slight, but charming coming-of-age story about a little girl and the bottle of rice wine who gives her orders from space. I’m talking, of course, about Kim Da-min’s exceedingly heartwarming “FAQ,” a thumb in the eye to cram-school culture with a sci-fi spin. When we first meet young Dong-chun (Park Na-eun), she’s already at her intellectual and emotional limit: her parents slam her into one after-school program after another, trying to prep her for the high-stakes world of adulthood with a barrage of math, science, and foreign language classes. (Her interventions even go so far as to seeking medical intervention to make her taller.) Trouble is, all this pressure taking its toll on the poor girl — she’s got crippling stage fright, and she barely has any friends at school. Her only comfort, it seems, are a pair of fuzzy children’s-show creatures who give her advice in a kind of Windows 95-desktop background mind-palace (a very charming detail).

But she gets even more divine intervention when she discovers a bottle of makgeolli (a Korean rice wine) at school, and she discovers that the bubbles speak to her in Morse Code (albeit backwards, and in Persian). And they’ve got a divine mission for her. 

That’s where “FAQ”‘s charms really fall into place, as her quest to decipher the code paradoxically leads her to work harder in her language classes and gives her newfound purpose outside her parents’ ambitions. But as the film progresses, it flowers into a sweeter, more melancholic take on the sky-high expectations of high-productivity cultures like South Korea’s, the way we can strip away our sense of hope and purpose by burying ourselves in metrics of excellence and status. In addition to Dong-chun’s stage fright, we also see glimpses of how the adults around her have fared in this system — whether it’s her mother reckoning with her ennui at giving up career for motherhood, or her layabout uncle, who’s given it all up to become a hippie drifter. One by one, they become involved in, or inspired by, Dong-chun’s journey, leading to a decidedly unexpected ending whose ambition echoes “Her” or, heck, in some ways Alex Proyas’ “Knowing.” Turns out the universe is one giant cram school, and sometimes a bubbling bottle of booze is just the most entertaining exam to take. 

Callie Hernandez Follows Strange Paths In Exclusive Trailer for Courtney Stephens’ Locarno Premiere Invention

In March I had the fortune to see a rough cut of Invention, a new film by Courtney Stephens (Terra Femme, The American Sector) that toes the documentary-fiction boundary more nimbly than most: it stars Callie Hernandez as a woman seeking clarification on the death of her inventor father (Hernandez’s own, glimpsed through archival footage) […]

The post Callie Hernandez Follows Strange Paths In Exclusive Trailer for Courtney Stephens’ Locarno Premiere Invention first appeared on The Film Stage.

Neuchâtel 2024 Interview: ENNENNUM Director Shalini Ushadevi Talks About Immortality

This year at the Neuchâtel International Fantastic Film Festival, several juries awarded several films. The Critic’s Jury awarded their prize by unanimous decision to Ennennum, an extremely well-written science fiction drama in which Ouso and Devi, a married couple, get confronted with the possibilities (and pitfalls) of technological immortality. You can read my review here. A week later I had the chance to interview its writer and director Shalini Ushadevi, so we sat down for a talk. ScreenAnarchy: Congratulations on your win. I was on that jury and it was the shortest deliberation ever, we all had your film as number one on our separate lists. Shalini Ushadevi: Thank you, that is great to know, that is very validating also. I heard it took a…

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Fantasia 2024 Review: WITCHBOARD, Chuck Russell Returns to Horror With This Stylish Series Update

Genre film legend Chuck Russell returns to horror after a twenty-year hiatus with his take on the classic ‘80s franchise, Witchboard. In reimagining the concept, Russell adapts the story of a Ouija board with a grudge into a bigger, flashier adventure now set in New Orleans and exploring the history of the spirit board going back to the 17th century. Though it doesn’t reinvent the wheel, Russell’s Witchboard is a perfectly decent – if a little long – stab at the haunted item subgenre that should satisfy fans of the earlier franchise. Christian (Aaron Dominguez) and his fiancée, Emily (Madison Iseman) are out gathering wild mushrooms in the run up to the grand opening of their new Creole restaurant in New Orleans when she stumbles…

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Fantasia 2024 Review: PENALTY LOOP, A Time Loop Thriller With An Exciting Twist

Jun (Wakaba Ryûya) is a man grieving the brutal murder of his girlfriend who finds his only solace in exacting revenge against her killer, Mizoguchi (Iseya Yûsuke). He meticulously plans and executes a scheme to surreptitiously assassinate the man responsible for her death, but there’s a problem. The next morning when Jun awakens, he experiences a sense of déjà vu, and he soon learns that his entire world has reset, Mizoguchi is still alive, and he has to kill him all over again. Revenge is a dish best served over and over and over again in Araki Shiji’s Penalty Loop, a dazzling time loop thriller with big ideas and stellar direction that may be one of the year’s best science fiction films. Though the microgenre…

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IN A VIOLENT NATURE Sequel Announced

Shudder and IFC Films announced that a sequel to Chris Nash’s smash hit slasher flick, In A Violent Nature, is in early development. Variety reported on this yesterday after the news was revealed during the “The Bold Voice of Contemporary Horror” panel at SDCC. The teaser poster of the now infamous steel hook was unveiled during the announcement.    Sequel producers include Peter Kuplowsky and Shannon Hanmer, and the first film’s writer and director, Chris Nash, will return as screenwriter. Emily Gotto, Nicholas Lazo and Samuel Zimmerman are overseeing development for Shudder.   “‘In a Violent Nature’ demonstrated that there continues to be a yearning for new perspectives in the horror landscape. We knew immediately that this distinctive take on the slasher would enthrall fans…

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Fantasia Review: The G Finds Dale Dickey Bringing the Rage

Ann Hunter (Dale Dickey) loves her husband. She’s simply never been the caregiver type. That’s what drew him to her in the first place––leaving his wife to be with someone more his speed in their ruthless, take-no-prisoners attitude. Age comes for everyone, though. And it came for him fast. Unfortunately, they had already moved closer […]

The post Fantasia Review: The G Finds Dale Dickey Bringing the Rage first appeared on The Film Stage.