Candidate #18
THE NEON DEMON
"One morning I woke up and realised I was both surrounded
and dominated by women. Strangely, a sudden urge was planted in me to make a
horror film about vicious beauty. After making Drive and
falling madly in love with the electricity of Los Angeles, I knew I had to
return to tell the story of The Neon Demon.”
--Nicolas Winding Refn
--Nicolas Winding Refn
Nicolas
Winding Refn’s The Neon Demon opens
with an artfully posed--and apparently dead--female body, subject to the cold,
hard male gaze, and its mechanical extension, the camera.
Much
can be gleaned from that single, provocative image regarding some of Refn’s
thematic concerns for this, his 10th feature.
“Once you hit 21 in this
industry, you’re so irrelevant.”
“Try 20.”
“True.”
Following
Jesse (Elle Fanning), newly arrived in L.A. to try her luck as a fashion model,
The Neon Demon--which began its
developmental life under the title I Walk
with the Dead--is Refn’s first attempt at a horror film, and it certainly
is that, albeit a horror film as told through the filter of the NWR aesthetic.
“True beauty is the
highest currency we have.
“Now, without it, she
would be nothing.”
My
first brush with Refn’s work was Fear X,
which, honestly, I wasn’t too thrilled about. I had missed his earlier titles, Pusher and Bleeder, as I also subsequently missed the Pusher sequels, and Bronson.
I
checked out Valhalla Rising, but
again, like Fear X, it didn’t quite
take with me.
But
Drive changed all that. Drive was the NWR title that solidly kicked
my film geek a$$.
And
though his follow-up, Only God Forgives,
was not as well-received by the wider film critic community, I absolutely loved it.
So
when word broke about his next film being a “horror movie/sex thriller,” I was so in.
And
now, after a title change and two female co-writers brought on board (British playwright
Polly Stenham and Mary Laws, who’s also written for AMC’s Preacher adaptation), here we are, and I am so happy that my film
geek love for Refn continues unabated.
“You know what my mother
used to call me? ‘Dangerous.’
“‘You’re a dangerous
girl.’
“She was right. I am dangerous.”
With
familiar genre faces that include Jena Malone and Keanu Reeves (as skeezy
dirtbag motel manager, Hank), and another killer
Cliff Martinez soundtrack, The Neon Demon
is slick, disturbingly erotic, and hallucinatory, much like the fashion
industry itself.
It’s
about appearances and facades, and the casually cruel nature of the modeling business,
where everyone is merely meat, complete with respective expiration dates.
“I can’t sing. I can’t
dance. I can’t write. No real talent.
“But I’m pretty… and I
can make money off pretty.”
Parting
Shot: Given its setting and subject matter, this is a perfect companion piece
to ¡Qué horror! 2015 title, Starry Eyes.
(The Neon Demon OS’ courtesy of bloody-disgusting.com,
dailydead.com, impawards.com, and shocktillyoudrop.com.)
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