By Noel Vera
Video Review
The Killing of a Sacred Deer
Directed by Yorgos Lanthimos
DVD
WITH all the horror films that popped out last year (and continue to emerge this year) few if any come close to being as bizarre as Yorgos Lanthimos鈥 The Killing of a Sacred Deer.
The horror starts right off, with an opening shot of what looks like a piece of muscle squirming with faintly obscene frequency (looks like a grotesque Japanese porn video I saw once, of a masturbation scene recorded internally — you don鈥檛 want to know the details); as matters turn out it鈥檚 a shot of open-heart surgery. Cut to cardiothoracic surgeon Steven Murphy (Colin Farrell) pulling off blooded gloves and surgical gown. He enjoys a good life: gorgeous wife Anna (they don鈥檛 come any more gorgeous than Nicole Kidman), beautiful children Kim (Raffey Cassidy) and Bob (Sunny Suljic), spacious stately home, great job in an ultramodern hospital — can鈥檛 do much better than that.
Only who is Martin (Barry Keoghan), the young man with some kind of hold or claim on the surgeon, and why is he readily introduced to Steven鈥檚 family — even encouraged to spend time with the kids?
Lanthimos takes his cue from Euripides鈥 Iphigenia in Aulis, where Agamemnon is forced to atone for killing the god Artemis鈥 sacred deer. He takes his cue from Greek drama in general by filming in austere settings (Steven鈥檚 near spotless house, the gleaming glass white-tile monument — mausoleum? — of a hospital) and using stylized, at times hilariously deadpan, acting (Steven in a medical convention in the middle of conversation: 鈥淥ur daughter started menstruating last week鈥 — no one bats an eye). He shoots in brightly lit sets and sun drenched exteriors, and paradoxically all that lighting feels less comforting than unsettling — as if to suggest that there鈥檚 nowhere one can hide or be forever safe; that all will eventually be exposed, secrets above all, and above all secret guilt. All this contributes to the overall effect of deliberate overwhelming fate: Steven will get his comeuppance and nothing he can do or say will change that outcome. Lanthimos slyly underlines that conclusion when Martin, in response to Steven鈥檚 hospitality, invites the older man to his house, where they sit with Martin鈥檚 mother (Alicia Silverstone in a small but startling role) to watch the boy鈥檚 favorite movie, Groundhog Day (鈥淲hat鈥檚 that again?鈥 鈥淚鈥檓 a god.鈥 鈥淵ou鈥檙e God.鈥 鈥淚鈥檓 a god; I鈥檓 not the God, I think.鈥).
Lanthimos gets full mileage of unease in the scenes between Steven and Martin (Is the boy a bastard son? A lover?) and even his most drawn-out quotidian moments have the nail-on-chalkboard quality of Jack Torrance鈥檚 interview scene in Stanley Kubrick鈥檚 The Shining. If I mention Kubrick that鈥檚 possibly because his spirit seems to persist, lingering in the margins of Lanthimos鈥 films: Dogtooth appropriates an image from the earlier picture, and Sacred Deer goes as far as to appropriate Kidman, whose more quarrelsome scenes with Farrell echo her scenes with Tom Cruise in Kubrick鈥檚 Eyes Wide Shut. Might as well note that the soundtrack, while not featuring music composed for the film, seems to keep wanting to morph into music (particularly Bela Bartok鈥檚) used in The Shining.
Arguably Lanthimos鈥 most potent weapon isn鈥檛 so much horror — though that, to put it mildly, ain鈥檛 exactly chopped liver — as it is humor. The comedy helps stiffen the film, give the horror understated if outrageous snap: by way of comparison, Jordan Peele鈥檚 Get Out (which I do like) seems fairly safe and humdrum, even when dealing with an issue as sensitive as racism. Once the situation becomes clear to the family (skip the rest of this paragraph if you haven鈥檛 seen the film), each member pleads his or her case to Steven as to why they shouldn鈥檛 be the sacrifice. They crawl on the floor, dragging their lifeless limbs behind them, point out this or that virtue they possess or action they have accomplished (鈥淚 cut my hair just as you want me to.鈥
鈥淚 love you more than anything in the world.鈥 鈥淚 think I鈥檓 gonna wear that black dress that you like.鈥). Deadpan delivery but the eyes are large and pleading — a more horrific image of supplication to patriarchal authority I can鈥檛 think of, at least in recent films.
It鈥檚 not all sunshine and light though. Steven is offered sex, which he rejects, suggesting a virtuous husband; Anna offers sex coldly, deliberately, as a practical transaction. Understand where Anna is coming from — where Steven seems paralyzed with indecision she鈥檚 driven to find a way out of this mess, plus, if we鈥檙e following the general outlines of the myth, Clytemnestra was unfaithful — but why make Steven look relatively better?
Not quite as resonant as Lanthimos鈥 The Lobster, a surprisingly poignant love story; not as economically and elegantly wrought as Dogtooth — his best work in my book, suggesting that nothing in myth or fantasy is stranger than plain unfiltered human perversity — but a potent film all its own.