Wednesday, 15 November 2017

A Stranger In My Home: Review of The Killing of a Sacred Deer

The Killing of a Sacred Deer

Director: Yorgos Lanthimos

By Alex Watson




Colin Farrell and Greek helmer Yorgos Lanthimos are becoming the new odd couple. After collaborating on the bafflingly brilliant picture, The Lobster, once again they strike gold. The Killing of a Sacred Deer is a bold, brave yet disturbing feature film. Lanthimos may confuse some people with his mixture of sadistic humor with high tension. Those who are familiar with his style will be blown away by one of the best movies of 2017.

Steven Murphy (Colin Farrell) is a successful surgeon who is bonding with troubled teen Martin (Barry Keoghan). Happily married to Anna (Nicole Kidman) with two children, everything seems pretty rosy. However, Steven was also the surgeon who operated on Martin`s father when he died. One day, Martin reveals he has placed a curse on the family and now Steven must kill one of his own family to balance the scales.

There is an eerie and distorted feeling from the very first moment of The Killing of a Sacred Deer. Kicking off with a bizarre conversation between Steven and colleague (Bill Camp) about watches- Lanthimos clearly intends to take us in all different directions. Steven`s relationships with others are put under the microscope early. Barry seems to have an almost mentor friendship with him, despite the deliberately strained conversation. There is also a heavily sinister undertone and Martin is always showing up unannounced at the hospital. Anna is a loving and doting wife and willing allows him to explore his fetish of having sex with her while she pretends to be asleep. Although everything is picture perfect on the outside- Martin slowly exposes the flaws the family has and pretty soon things become tense.

Quickly Martin asserts his dominance over Steven's daughter Kim (Raffey Cassidy) and son Bob (Sunny Suljic). One moment sees his daughter get undressed in front of him, only for him to casually reject her. Guilt is another factor that is heavily implied throughout Lanthimos' picture. Steven carries a burden from the night Martin's father passed away. His refusal to acknowledge his potential liability marks him out as prideful and stubborn. During the early stages, we are never sure whether Martin is toying with Steven or is genuinely interested in bonding with him. During a freaky dinner at Martin's, his mother (Alicia Silverstone) makes a bizarre pass at his 'beautiful hands' and the rejection that follows seems to be the catalyst for what follows. In a shocking yet brilliantly underplayed sequence, the young man reveals the terrible truth. In a nervous and overly fast voice, Steven is informed that if he doesn't kill one of his family, they will all become paralyzed and slowly die.

From this point on The Killing of a Sacred Deer transforms into pure psychological horror. Thanks to the terrific camera work of Thimios Bakatakis we are drawn into every father's worst nightmare. Out of nowhere, his children get sick and no solution can be found. Steven transforms from a cool and collected being to becoming a wounded tiger. Soon he resorts to increasingly desperate measures to try and salvage a no-win situation. The moral implications of what he will have to eventually do are almost sickening. Lanthimos drags his audience through the whole spectrum of emotions and we all know that we cannot look away.

Colin Farrell demonstrates that with the right director he can be a revelation. Carrying the movie's emotional and mental core- Farrell shows a side of his acting we have seldom seen. Some may still sneer at his ability (particularly his big-budget failures) but its impossible to deny that he is Oscar-worthy here. Nicole Kidman also gives strong support as the suffering yet committed Anna. Almost the Lady Macbeth figure, later on, she is the one behind the scenes keeping it together. Newcomer Barry Keoghan almost steals the picture from Farrell with a menacing turn as Martin. From the moment he enters his permanently monotone voice is immediately unsettling. Keoghan is a star we need to watch closely.

Some may find The Killing of a Sacred Deer extremely unsettling, but Yorgos Lanthimos is very different kind of director. On tension and style alone, this is brilliant filmmaking.

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