![]() ![]() A scene in which she communicates with a double of herself is perhaps the high point of the film. The film also subtly portrays her grappling with her own disillusionment and cynicism, regretting the ways in which she has turned her gifts into a selfish, hollow racket. Toby Poser as the grieving mother is especially good, effectively conveying a realistically complex and moving portrait of someone's who's simultaneously certain of her pessimistic convictions yet desperately hopeful that she will be proven wrong. The acting is fine, and the characterization is well-developed. The cinematography here is not to be missed. There's a crisp, almost monochrome color palette of white snow against black night, with a touch of resonant blue and a splash of red thrown in for good measure. ![]() The setting is immersive, with richly contrasted color. The non-supernatural sequences are likewise artfully crafted, with the camera often functioning as a ghostly voyeur. The supernatural sequences have the twisty, extradimensional, mechanical cadaver feel of Tarsem or of a late 90s Marilyn Manson video, and the disorienting special effects are done with a sleight-of-hand (digital or practical, I'm not sure) that's seamless and very impressive. In spite of that, this movie is gorgeously lensed. I don't know much about the background of this movie, but I know it was made on location by an actual family, probably with a budget of next to nothing. ![]()
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