Jennifer Kent – Way Too Indie http://waytooindie.com Independent film and music reviews Fri, 02 Dec 2016 17:34:42 +0000 en-US hourly 1 Way Too Indiecast is the official podcast of WayTooIndie.com. Our film critics grip and gush about the latest indie movies and sometimes even mainstream ones. Find all of our reviews, podcasts, news, at www.waytooindie.com Jennifer Kent – Way Too Indie yes Jennifer Kent – Way Too Indie dustin@waytooindie.com dustin@waytooindie.com (Jennifer Kent – Way Too Indie) The Official Podcast of Way Too Indie Jennifer Kent – Way Too Indie http://s3-us-west-2.amazonaws.com/waytooindie/podcast-album-art.jpg http://waytooindie.com ‘The Babadook’ Director Signs Onto Next Project http://waytooindie.com/news/the-babadook-director-signs-onto-next-project/ http://waytooindie.com/news/the-babadook-director-signs-onto-next-project/#respond Fri, 05 Jun 2015 13:01:22 +0000 http://waytooindie.com/?p=36869 We couldn't be more excited to see what Jennifer Kent comes up with next.]]>

Hollywood is in dire need for female voices—actresses, writers, and most certainly directors. The women to men ratio of those behind the camera has never been great, and while it has risen in the past several years the peak is still pretty dismal. Roughly 10% of the top grossing 250 films released in a calendar year are directed by women. All of which is what makes Jennifer Kent, the kickass new voice behind last year’s horror sensation The Babadook, all the better. To boot, Kent has lined up her next film: the feature-length adaptation of Alice + Freda Forever.

Based on the nonfiction book by Alexis Coe, Alice + Freda Forever circles around nineteen-year-old Alice Mitchell and her bizarre motive for murdering her fiancée Freda Ward in 1892—a murder which stunned the nation. Within days of the murder Alice was declared insane by doctors and her father, and not long after a jury agreed and she was institutionalized.

With all the projects that were surely thrown at Kent after the smashing success of The Babadook, Alice + Freda Forever must certainly be one of the most bizarre and interesting choices, one that seems to make a whole lot of sense. While not an outright horror (though neither was The Babadook), Alice looks to offer Kent the chance to flex some other muscles and keep her weird going—we couldn’t be more excited. Though, frankly, we’d line up for anything Kent chose next.

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The Babadook http://waytooindie.com/review/movie/the-babadook/ http://waytooindie.com/review/movie/the-babadook/#comments Mon, 30 Nov -0001 00:00:00 +0000 http://waytooindie.com/?p=24286 The year's best horror film toys with our childhood fears and darkest thoughts.]]>

The feel of a horror film is almost more important than the content. And for all the grit and grime the Eli Roth’s of this world have pumped out, there is something truly refreshing in Jennifer Kent’s simplistic and intelligent new Australian horror film The Babadook. Even more refreshing is a distinct lack of gore, cheap frights or action-crazed plot. In an age where most horror films are phoned-in re-hashings of tales already told, The Babadook plays with a nostalgia all can relate to, the adolescent and irrational fear of an unknown evil determined to torment for the sake of tormenting, in an original and satisfying way.

In her directorial début, Kent, who also wrote the film, presents the touching tale of a single mother, Amelia (Essie Davis) at her wit’s end with her high-strung 6-year old Robbie (Daniel Henshall). Scraping by with her job at an elderly care home and being pulled out often to deal with complaints from her son’s school regarding his behavior, her situation is made that much more bleak by the fact that her son is a living reminder of her beloved husband’s untimely death as he was driving her to the hospital to give birth when he was killed. Robbie grates at his mother’s nerves with constant complaining of monsters and a tendency to build homemade weapons.

One night Robbie picks a new book from his bookshelf for his mother to read him before bed. As Amelia reads the darkly drawn story, a macabre and frightening figure presents itself in the pages: “Whether it’s in a word, or in a look, you can’t get rid of the Babadook.” Robbie rightly freaks out, and Amelia has to soothe him to get him to calm down. Amelia wonders at the book’s appearance, but when Robbie claims to start seeing the Babadook at home, in the car, and at school she starts to take the book more seriously, shredding it and throwing it into the trash. When it reappears later, she realizes something more sinister is at hand. She goes to the police, thinking perhaps a stalker is threatening her and Robbie, but the dark signs around her imply she and Robbie are on their own.

The Babadook

 

Kent’s story plays with traditional horror devices of mother-as-protective-hero (à la Poltergeist) and mother-as-threat (à la Carrie), teetering back and forth between both. In this way she challenges the notion that a mother is only as good or as bad as each extreme. Instead Amelia is a refreshingly modern mother. Stressed, under-sexed, lacking sleep and patience and generally trying to raise a child on her own in a world of snobby soccer moms and judgmental school system officials. Like all great horror films, the evil presented represents a part of our own psyches, the kind that feeds off our darkest thoughts, and in this case, Amelia’s own misplaced blame for her husband’s death. When Robbie pushes his cousin out of a treehouse for poking fun of his fatherless-ness or screeches from the backseat of his car for not getting his way, it’s hard not to want to strangle him a bit ourselves.

The Babadook itself is hardly seen—though the pages of the children’s book are plenty frightening in giving it form, thank you designer/illustrator Alexander Juhasz—but Kent affectively holds tension with excellent sound use and an overall dread that plagues every scene. Even the set design, with all the grey and dark blue walls of their home, plenty of dark corners, provides a cloud of gloom and doom mixed into every scene. One would think this small family could solve a few of their problems with a few coats of brightly colored paint. Instead Amelia begs a doctor for sleeping pills to force her son to sleep and give her the much-needed rest she desires. But in a state of exhaustion Amelia becomes even more vulnerable to the dark thoughts already residing in her, as the Babadook urges her to do what both ultimately want: to kill Robbie.

The Babadook holds more scares than any film all year, but more importantly maintains anxiety throughout its entirety (if you watch at home, we highly recommend lights off and sound way up). Kent taps into the horror genre’s ability to provide a platform for women to showcase their psychological versatility. It’s not simply woman as victim or monster. And the fear that keeps children from leaving their bed at night suspicious of what lies underneath, or the fear of what lurks in the dark of our closets at night, or the noises that always seem to come from right behind closed doors, these are the fears that power the Babadook, and indeed the dark side of our own imaginations. The film’s modern ending doesn’t try to neatly soothe our fears, but instead acts as a reminder that darkness never goes away, but can be kept at bay.

The Babadook is available on VOD or in limited theaters today. 

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Trailer for Sundance Horror ‘The Babadook’ Will Freak You Out http://waytooindie.com/news/trailer-for-sundance-horror-the-babadook-will-freak-you-out/ http://waytooindie.com/news/trailer-for-sundance-horror-the-babadook-will-freak-you-out/#respond Mon, 30 Nov -0001 00:00:00 +0000 http://waytooindie.com/?p=26202 It’s getting close to October, so that means the onslaught of horror films is about to begin. There will be plenty of scary movies to keep an eye out for in the coming weeks, but there’s one we’re quite excited to see. Jennifer Kent‘s debut feature The Babadook premiered way back in January at Sundance […]]]>

It’s getting close to October, so that means the onslaught of horror films is about to begin. There will be plenty of scary movies to keep an eye out for in the coming weeks, but there’s one we’re quite excited to see. Jennifer Kent‘s debut feature The Babadook premiered way back in January at Sundance to a surprising amount of raves. And ever since it scared the crap out of audiences around the world through its tour on the festival circuit, we’ve been anxious for IFC Midnight to finally unleash it on the public.

Well it looks like that time is near, with IFC releasing a trailer for The Babadook today. Be sure to watch the creepy trailer below. The Babadook comes out in theatres and VOD on November 28th.

Six years after the violent death of her husband, Amelia (Essie Davis) is at a loss. She struggles to discipline her ‘out of control’ 6 year-old, Samuel (Noah Wiseman), a son she finds impossible to love. Samuel’s dreams are plagued by a monster he believes is coming to kill them both.

When a disturbing storybook called ‘The Babadook’ turns up at their house, Samuel is convinced that the Babadook is the creature he’s been dreaming about. His hallucinations spiral out of control, he becomes more unpredictable and violent. Amelia, genuinely frightened by her son’s behaviour, is forced to medicate him.

But when Amelia begins to see glimpses of a sinister presence all around her, it slowly dawns on her that the thing Samuel has been warning her about may be real.

The Babadook trailer

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