Martha Marcy May
Marlene
Written and Directed By: Sean Durkin
Starring: Elizabeth Olsen, John Hawkes, Sarah Paulson, Hugh Dancy, Brady Corbet, Julia Garner, and Louisa Krause.
Director of Photography: Jody Lee Lipes, Editor: Zachary Stuart-Pontier, Production Designer: Chad Keith, Original Music: Daniel Bensi and Saunder Jurriaans
Rated: R for things rather not spoiled.
Starring: Elizabeth Olsen, John Hawkes, Sarah Paulson, Hugh Dancy, Brady Corbet, Julia Garner, and Louisa Krause.
Director of Photography: Jody Lee Lipes, Editor: Zachary Stuart-Pontier, Production Designer: Chad Keith, Original Music: Daniel Bensi and Saunder Jurriaans
Rated: R for things rather not spoiled.
If you go
see the independent thriller, Martha
Marcy May Marlene, which you most definitely should, I want you to sit as
close to the screen as possible. Not because I want you to hurt your neck (in
that case, go a few rows back), but I want you to be engulfed by the film's intense close-ups, which will put you in the most psychologically uncomfortable position
possible. I want you to really feel each loud sound that disrupts this film full of silences. I want you to feel as
paranoid as its main character, feeling that any moment of calm can be
instantly destroyed by unknown forces creeping just outside the frame.
Martha Marcy May Marlene is the latest
in a series of independent features from the United States that appear to be
ushering in a new wave of smartly composed films that reject the DIY mumblecore
genre in favor of a cinema of haunting compositions and dynamic narratives. Although the film is directed by newcomer Sean
Durkin, some of the other names in the credits show the evolving filmmaking
collective: a producer of the film is Antonio Campos, who shot the haunting surveillance
thriller Afterschool, and that film’s
director of photography Jody Lee Lipes also create haunting shadow filled frames here. But here it is Mr. Durkin, as well as his impressive cast led
by Elizabeth Olsen, that leads what is an intensely intimate character study in
the guise of a mystery that does less conventional scares and more spine-tingling
chills.
