THE
SIREN (2019)
Starring
Margaret Ying Drake, MacLeod Andrews, Evan Dumouchel. Directed by
Perry Blackshear. (79 min)
ON
DVD FROM DARK SKY FILMS
Review
by Josey, the Sudden Cat
One
unique aspect of The Siren – for horror movies, anyway -
is that one of its main characters happens to be gay, yet in-no-way
is his sexuality part of the story. Al (MacLeod Andrews) is simply
out to avenge the death of his husband, who he’s certain was killed
by a mythical siren that lurks in a woodland lake. Turns out he’s right, of
course, otherwise no movie.
Ever
vigilant, Al lives by the same lake, where quite a few people have
drowned over the years. Then Tom (Evan Dumouchel) arrives to stay in
a rented cabin nearby. He informs Al he’s mute, the result of a
swimming accident as a boy, so he has a healthy respect for the
water. Later, a mysterious woman named Nina (Margaret Ying Drake)
swims up to the dock. She’s the titular character, of course, and
sets her sights on Tom as her next quarry. He becomes enamored with
Nina, even after her first attempt to drown him. Once Al learns she's the siren he's been looking for, he wants to kill her before she claims another poor rube.
"Yeah...it's a Rolex." |
It’s
a promising set-up for an intriguing three-character drama, whichThe
Siren fulfills only sporadically. The characters are interesting
and the setting is wonderfully atmospheric, enhancing the film’s
melancholy tone. However, it’s unnecessarily ambiguous for long
stretches. There’s no problem with a filmmaker trying to disorient
the viewer by having them question what’s real or a character’s
imagination. In Tom’s case, since he’s supposedly enchanted by
Nina, these surreal sequences are quietly unnerving. But it
eventually grows more confusing than engaging, especially once
the narrative starts jumping from one unrelated scene to another with
no transition (such as Nina’s encounters with a young child late in
the film).
Considering
its artier pretensions comprise a majority of the running time, The
Siren might have been better as a short. Still, one has to admire
writer-director Perry Blackshear’s ambition. Both technically and
narratively, he instills it with just enough quirks to make it worth
checking out.
EXTRA
KIBBLES
ARROW
FRIGHTFEST INTERVIEW – With writer/director Perry Blackshear.
2
AUDIO COMMENTARIES - #1) By Perry Blackshear & actor Margaret
Ying Drake; #2) By actors MacLeod Andrews & Evan Dumouchel.
TRAILER
KITTY CONSENSUS:
NOT BAD. LIKE CAT CHOW.
No comments:
Post a Comment