Candidate #15
THE BLACKCOAT'S DAUGHTER
(September 2015)
Osgood Perkins (son of Norman Bates himself, Anthony Perkins) first
landed in ¡Qué horror! territory earlier this year as
co-writer on Nick Simon’s The Girl in the Photographs.
Now he’s back, joining Simon’s effort as a 2016 Candidate, with his feature debut, The Blackcoat’s Daughter.
Now he’s back, joining Simon’s effort as a 2016 Candidate, with his feature debut, The Blackcoat’s Daughter.
Originally
titled February, the film follows Kat,
Rose and Joan, the former two left largely alone and unattended at their virtually
empty boarding school. Both are in a delicate condition (one, emotional, the
other, physical), and soon, the quiet in the halls and rooms is shattered by
the undeniable fact that this is, after all, a horror movie.
Under
Perkins’ assured directorial hand, the off-kilter air that is in evidence very
early on quickly settles into an unease that pervades the rest of the film’s
running time, helped in no small part by Perkins’ younger brother, Elvis
(himself a musician with 3 albums under his belt), who scores the proceedings
with a jangly, atonal touch.
With
Bryan Bertino (whose The Strangers nabbed
itself a ¡Qué horror! 2008 slot) as one of its producers,
and genre faces James Remar, Emma Roberts, and a nearly unrecognizable Lauren
Holly along for the darkly disquieting ride, The Blackcoat’s Daughter is a must-see for anyone who treasures
horror that doesn’t feel the need to over-explain itself.
It’s
also a promising sign for Perkins’ follow-up, I Am the Pretty Thing That Lives in the House, which has already
gotten some good notices from its TIFF premiere a week ago.
(The Blackcoat’s Daughter & February OS’ courtesy of impawards.com.)
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