What I Liked: The cannibalistic tendencies of this group called “eaters” isn’t overexplained. We’re given enough information to know what the deal is and then we’re sent on our way. These folks are born with the disease/condition/mental illness/supernatural ability and must consume human flesh. They can have regular food as well but the desire for people meat only grows stronger the older you get and if you abstain for too long you tend to go crazy. Magnificent straightforward premise.
Wonderful natural performances from everyone but of course
Taylor Russell (Escape Room: Tournament of Champions) as Maren and
Timothee Chalamet (Little Women (2019)) as Lee are the heart of the
whole thing. They both have to run the
gauntlet where they’re trepid, suspicious, sorrowful, angry, confused, hurt,
worrisome, anxious, joyful and madly in love.
It’s difficult to pull off a fraction of the emotional states the roles
call for and they nail each and every one of them. Maren is new to being on her own fending for
her survival out in the world so she doesn’t know who to trust. When she meets Lee she can sense they have
the same affliction and that he could be someone she can befriend. Lee meanwhile has been moving around solo for
a while so he knows the ropes. He takes
Maren under his wing and they form a bond during their journey that develops
beautifully and gets tested at every turn.
This is shot and edited very nicely. Cinematographer Arseni Khachaturan captures
both the gorgeousness and dinginess of the American Midwest. Landscapes look stunning while towns look rundown
and grimy sometimes. I appreciate editor
Marco Costa letting scenes breathe even during tense moments. Just hearing the characters munch away while
showing the victim’s personal effects drives home that this was a human being
with a life that has plainly been reduced to sustenance for others.
Trent Reznor and Atticus Ross turn in another delightful
soundtrack. With the plucky acoustic
guitar and synths it kinda sounds like a cross between the Brokeback
Mountain score and Tangerine Dream.
It accents the young love of the leads and the turmoil beneath the
surface very well.
What I Didn’t Like: Minor complaint but if you’ve
seen a few movies before it becomes sorta obvious what the final confrontation
will be. And even though it comes across
a touch tacked on you do need the finale to satisfactorily wrap up the story. Without it something would certainly feel
like it’s missing. Shout out to Mark
Rylance (The BFG) by the way who plays the fantastic creepy older
eater. There are flashes when you think
he might be ok but your gut tells you there’s something sinister about this
sonuvabitch. At the same time he’s a
pathetic creature who’s been on his own too long and is desperate for
companionship. Great performance.
Overall Impressions: Man, what a cool take on
vampirism. I can’t think of anything
else that’s quite like it. It’s first
and foremost a romantic drama with just a sprinkling of horror and killer-couple-on-the-road
vibes. I wanna say you could take away
the cannibal stuff and it would still work with little changes but I’m not so
sure. It’s the overpowering drive to eat
people that causes Maren and Lee to live on the fringes of society and murder
so it makes them sympathetic and you forgive them. Killing purely for the sake of it or for money
or a car or whatever wouldn’t have the same emotional payoff.
Probably the biggest draw for this picture is less the
premise, as intriguing as it is, but rather Maren and Lee themselves. They’re
cool dudes who are lovely to hang out with for two hours and you wanna see how
their relationship progresses. If they
were simply drifters with no place to go and no one to turn to but each other
that would be enticing enough. But throwing
in the complication of the necessity to feed on human flesh raises this to
another level. How does a couple
navigate a world with a fucked up hang up like that? You should definitely check this one
out. And maybe keep a few tissues on
hand, or napkins.
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