Showing posts with label Elizabeth Olsen. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Elizabeth Olsen. Show all posts

Monday, 1 July 2013

Day 182: Martha Marcy May Marlene


A young woman escapes a cult and is taken in by her sister who she hasn’t seen or spoken to in 2 years. She is finding it difficult separating her life now and the time she spent in the cult, and it causes her to become more paranoid.

The film continually splits between Martha’s (Elizabeth Olsen) time now and her memories of then. We see how she accepted the things that happened and how she became one of them. Early on during her stay with them, she wakes up to find the leader raping her. Afterwards, one of the other women tells her that it was a beautiful thing that happened and Martha seems to accept it. And later she takes one of the new girls to the leader and drugs her, so the same thing will happen to her. Some of them go into the homes of rich people during the night and steal things, and she joins them. It seems like she enjoys feeling like she belongs and ‘finding her role in the family.’ But after she witnesses a murder, she decides to escape.

Martha calls her sister, Lucy (Sarah Paulson), and she comes straight away to pick her up. She hasn’t seen her in 2 years and she is obviously worried about what happened to her but Martha doesn’t want to talk about it. Lucy and her husband are quite well off and they have a nice house. During her time in the cult, all of the members shared clothes and grew their own food and shared in the everyday chores. Martha can’t stop herself from judging the abundant wealth that Lucy has and she makes it clear that she thinks it’s not the right way to live. She doesn’t want to return to the cult, however, and she becomes increasingly more paranoid and believes that they are coming for her. The way the film ends, we’re not sure if she has really managed to escape or if she’ll be taken back.

We’re not given much information on Martha’s life prior to the cult but it seems like she was very unhappy. Her relationship with Lucy is very tense. Lucy feels guilty about not being there for Martha when she was younger and is trying to make up for it now by taking care of her. Martha is terrified of being alone and when Lucy tells her that she’s going to take her to get help, she lashes out. The lack of background we’re given was quite interesting because it allows you to make up your own. We don’t know what led her to the cult but we can fill in the details, perhaps even considering what it would take for us to end up in that place ourselves.


7/10

Monday, 22 April 2013

Day 112: Silent House



While helping her Dad (Adam Trese) and Uncle (Eric Sheffer Stevens) fix up their house before it’s sold, Sarah (Elizabeth Olsen) hears a noise coming from upstairs. That noise leads to lots of dashing about and silent screaming (I was actually mighty impressed with that, Olsen is great) and a horrible discovery.

There is barely any lighting to the film, it’s all torches and candles, which leads to feeling really claustrophobic and disoriented. And the juddery camera helps with that feel too. Sarah spends the majority of the time trying to escape from what she believes is an intruder type who has attacked her Dad. While they’re still checking out the house, her Dad stumbles across some polaroids and quickly hides them. Then later her Uncle does the same thing. At one point she hides beneath a snooker table and she hears the camera and a man trying to get a little girl to relax, but there’s another man there too. Turns out Sarah is remembering the abuse she suffered at the hands of her Dad and Uncle and the ‘intruder’ in the film was her all along. She realises towards the end what’s happening and that she's tied her Dad up but he manages to talk himself free and then he beats her with his belt. Well, that is until she kills him with a sledge hammer. I’m not sure if you’re supposed to cheer when that happens but I did.

The fact I could barely see anything for the majority of the film was driving me nuts and I hate the shaky camera shots. But the story was interesting and I liked that it wasn’t just a simple murderery-intruder story.

I’ve decided that since I take notes during the films but don’t necessarily talk about everything in the blog, I’ll put my notes in the comments. Just so you can see how I react to things as they happen. It mainly involves swearing, truth be told. And repeated use of the word ‘babe’.

7/10