She Who Must Burn

She_who_must_burnMac is a man who may love thy neighbor, but thy neighbors certainly don’t love him back. The animus stems from the fact that Mac works as a Deputy Sheriff in a desolate and depressed but devoutly religious mining town where his girlfriend Angela (with whom he lives “out of wedlock”) is an abortion counselor who runs a clinic out of their home. Mac leaves for work everyday to protesters on his lawn calling him and his wife “killers” and “murderers” while baby dolls covered in blood hang from his tree.

Decidedly anti pro-choice is town Pastor Jeremiah Baarker. His grip over the town is vice-like, and he insists on all pregnancies being carried through to term, even if it results in the death of the mother, the child or both.

After Jeremiah’s brother Caleb’s wife Rebecca births a stillborn child, Jeremiah interprets it as a sign from God to make a child of his own. When his wife Margaret shows reticence, the good pastor forcibly has his way with her. And when Margaret, post-coitus, reveals that she’s on the pill, Jeremiah beats the ever-living shit out of her.

Margaret runs to Angela, having made the decision to leave Jeremiah for good. Angela arranges for Margaret to find sanctuary, but as Margaret sits in the passenger seat of a van, hopefully heading toward greener pastures, she’s unaware that brother-in-law Caleb has witnessed the exodus.

SheWhoMustBurnThe protesters at Mac’s house soon become more aggressive. They descend upon Angela and start throwing eggs, and one hits her in the face. She takes a bat to the one who cast the offending ovum, but before things get too out of hand, the pastor steps in and, under the guise of civility, asks to come inside to speak. However, once in the house, his calm demeanor gives way to quiet menace as he demands to know the address of where his wife is. Rebecca and Caleb join in and compound the threat, even going as far as blaming Angela for bringing the wrath of God upon the town. Nonetheless, Angela remains unbowed.

The final act of She Who Must Burn is the veritable definition of harrowing. It is a masterfully-directed piece of cinema, so bone-chilling that this reviewer is still reeling. It calls to mind (but does not emulate) films as diverse as Straw Dogs, Kill List, Martyrs and Take Shelter. Furthermore, it takes an artistic device, pathetic fallacy, that is utilized so often and so hamfistedly that it has practically become cliché, and reclaims it to great effect.

She Who Must Burn (screening this weekend as part of Blood in the Snow) can hardly be described as nuanced nor subtle. There is absolutely zero doubt as to which side of the political spectrum 82-year-old (!) writer/director Larry Kent resides. While Pastor Baarker and his kin may at times come of as religious nutjob cartoon characters, there’s no arguing that there are people out there like that (for evidence, just Google “Westboro Baptist Church”).

With political and religious enmity currently at an uncomfortably elevated level, with people using perceived differences to do and say unspeakably horrific things, with religion and ethnicity being used as a straw man fallacy for the most extreme sorts of polarization and hatred, Kent’s film is extremely relevant. Kent is one octogenarian who is not softening with age. He’s mad as hell, and he uses the medium of film to vent that rage. With She Who Must Burn, Kent is implying an allegiance with the late and lamented Clash singer Joe Strummer. He’s implying that we can no longer, as a species, as a race, look blindly toward a certain man in the sky, but rather, to paraphrase Strummer, look to our sisters and brothers instead and put humanity back into the ring. God help us if we don’t.

**** (out of five)

Save Yourself

Save Yourself posterSave Yourself is a highly-anticipated film from writer/director Ryan M. Andrews (Sick). When the Canadian premier was announced as part of the line-up for this year’s Blood in the Snow Canadian Film Festival (Nov. 27 – 29, 2015), it sold out almost immediately, prompting fest organizers to quickly arrange a second screening. And it’s easy to see why anticipation is so high. First, Save Yourself stars a wide array of young and emerging genre film talent, each acquitting themselves excellently in their respective roles, and second, the film kicks ass in all sorts of ways.

Save Yourself begins with a girl in a very precarious place. She’s bound and gagged in a basement, taunted by a woman whose plans for her are more nefarious than merely inviting her to Thanksgiving dinner. Just as the tormentor pours gasoline on her potential victim, another girl runs downstairs just in the nick of time, baseball bat in hand. The victim and her rescuer are played by Tianna Nori (The Demolisher) and Jessica Cameron (Truth or Dare, A Grim Becoming). Together, they are sister actresses Kim and Sasha Tobin, and as the camera pulls back, we learn that the opening scene is actually a film entitled “Xploitation” and both actresses are in the audience. (Well Kim is at least; Sasha’s in the projection room receiving a bit of, shall we say, pleasures of the more adult kind.)

As the film unspools before an excited audience, the director, Crystal Lacroix (played by the formidable Tristan Risk of American Mary and The Editor), leaves the cinema for a smoke and some self-loathing. Seems she’s not pleased with her film nor the direction of her career, and laments having to keep up with the “ankle biters” that have taken a prime festival slot away from her.

Après-screening, the actresses want to stay and party, but Crystal runs a tight ship and there’s an upcoming screening in L.A. to get to. So with the road beckoning, the director, her actresses, the producer and the writer jump in the car to make the night’s drive to the next destination. 

Save_Yourself_2En route, Crystal stops to grab a smoke. When a half hour goes by with no sign of the director, the rest of the coterie are understandably worried. The four remaining girls debate whether to split up and go looking or to stay at the car and wait. (Quoth the writer, “I have never written a script where splitting up is a good idea!”) Nonetheless, three of the four decide to search while Sasha opts to remain in the vehicle.

The search party encounters a large home in the middle of nowhere and debates knocking on the door to ask to use a phone, but as they’re outside pondering what to do, the mistress of the house, Astrid Sauter (Bite’s Elma Begovic), gives them a less than hospitable welcome. Her husband Chris (the indefatigable Ry Barrett of Ejecta, The Demolisher and The Drownsman in yet another solid performance) is a little more welcoming and invites the trio in for tea.

Those who have traveled down horror’s road a time or two before probably can guess where this is going, and to a certain extent, they’d be right. However, Andrews is too good a writer/director to stick to the tried and true. The final third of the film is bonkers in all the right ways, and the lip-smackingly delicious dénouement was one that this reviewer did not see coming.

Andrews’ talent behind the camera is undeniable. But the real takeaway from Save Yourself is the sheer awesomeness that is Tristan Risk. Her indelible portrayal of Beatress in American Mary introduced her to horror audiences as someone with a great deal of potential, and Save Yourself is the film that is going to fucking make her. She’s that good.

Save_Yourself_1Save Yourself is the real deal. It’s nicely paced, smartly crafted, and uniformly well-acted. While not an out-and-out gorefest, the film can hardly be called restrained and boasts some incredibly effective and well-rendered practical grue gags courtesy of our friends at The Butcher Shop. 

If Save Yourself comes to your town, do your self a favor and drop everything right away to go see it. It’s 91 minutes well spent.

Highly recommended.

**** (out of five)

CHECK OUT OUR INTERVIEW WITH DIRECTOR OF SAVE YOURSELF, RYAN M. ANDREWS