Thursday 14 March 2013

Livid


Livid

French horror has been going through something of a renaissance in the last decade.  Collectively branded the New French Extremity, transgressive films like In My Skin (Marina de Van), Trouble Every Day (Claire Denis), Baise-moi (Virginie Despentes & Coralie Trinh Thi) and the work of Gaspar Noe (Irreversible, Seul contre tous), visceral, confrontational, taboo-busting, urgent films that push the boundaries of acceptability, have divided audiences and critics alike, blurring the lines between arthouse and horror and opening the door for the likes of Xavier Gens, director of Frontiere(s) and The Divide, Pascal Laugier, whose stunning Martyrs is probably one of the most disturbing films almost none of you have seen, and Julien Maury & Alexandre Bustillo’s brutal, unrelenting, audacious Inside.

An expectant mother battling a scissor-wielding psychobitch from Hell (Beatrice Dalle, who else?) for her baby in a bleak, gory, disturbing, poetic tale of fetal attraction, Maury & Bustillo were always going to find it difficult to follow the grueling intensity of home-invasion bodyhorror Inside.  While it’s, thankfully, not as harsh, brutal and downright nasty as Inside, their latest dark delight Livid will still shock you out of your skin with its tale of lost girls, dark secrets, ballet scenes far more brutal and nightmarish than anything you saw in Black Swan and antagonists who’d happily tear the throats from R-Patz, K-Stew and the rest of the sparkle fairies. 

Still haunted by the unexplained suicide of her mother (Beatrice Dalle, who else?), young Lucie (Chloe Coulloud) takes a job as a trainee carer/home-help under the watchful eye of the gruff but friendly Mrs Wilson (Irene Jacob) who she assists on home visits to their elderly patients.  The last stop of the day is the foreboding mansion of ballet teacher Madame Jessel (Marie-Claude Pietragalla), a frail, comatose old woman whose only daughter mysteriously died many years before.  While seeing to the bed-ridden old woman’s personal needs, Mrs Wilson lets slip that somewhere in the sprawling, labyrinthine house is rumoured to be hidden a priceless treasure, one that Mrs Wilson has sought but never found.

That night, Hallowe’en night, Lucie, boyfriend William (Felix Moati) and friend Ben (Jeremy Kapone) return to the mansion under cover of darkness and break in, intent on finding the treasure and stealing it for themselves.  But the treasure isn’t what they thought it was and as Madame Jessel’s darkest secrets are revealed, Lucie and her friends find themselves fighting not only for their lives but their very souls…

In conjuring up a hallucinatory dreamscape of half-glimpsed terrors and nightmarish, beautiful imagery, of clockwork ballerinas and ancient crones, dead mothers and damaged daughters, Maury & Bustillo have succeeded in creating a horror fantasy that haunts rather than disturbs, an adult fairytale influenced as much by Dario Argento and Guillermo del Toro as by the Brothers Grimm.  Don’t worry too much about logic, Livid is a film to surrender to and experience.

David Watson
Written & Directed by:
Julien Maury & Alexandre Bustillo
Starring:
Chloe Coulloud, Felix Moati, Jeremy Kapone, Catherine Jacob, Marie-Claude Pietragalla
Genre:
Horror
Language:
French
Runtime:
88 minutes
Certificate:
18
Rating:
4/5
UK DVD Release Date:
13th August 2012

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