Greek director Yorgos Lanthimos (The
Lobster, Dogtooth) doesn’t make simple,
straightforward movies. He doesn’t offer easy answers, or often even answers at
all. His latest, The Killing of a Sacred Deer, doesn’t
depart from this formula, but like his other films, it’s hypnotic, confrontational,
and lingers long after exiting the theater.
The Killing of a Sacred Deer is
compelling, dense, and strange—a friend asked how it was and my response was,
“Weird as balls,” which I stand by. Brimming with unusual choices, it’s awkward
and off-kilter, full of deliberate button pushing, and packed with deep-dive
psycho-sexual baggage that’s way above my paygrade to unpack.
Steven Murphy (Colin Farrell) is a renowned heart surgeon
with a successful wife, Anna (Nicole Kidman), two perfect kids, Kim (Raffey
Cassidy) and Bob (Sunny Suljic), and an idyllic life. Things crumble when
Martin (Barry Keoghan, Dunkirk), a young man he’s taken
under his wing, turns sinister and forces Steven to make an impossible
decision.
On the surface, Sacred Deer plays like a
revenge thriller, where a creepy, initially harmless seeming kid inserts
himself into this family’s life only to reveal the darkness of his true
intentions. Martin has shadowy motivations; Steven reacts to those. But it’s
much more layered and nuanced, and not nearly as straightforward as that
sounds.
Like many other picture perfect nuclear family units, rot
runs through the Murphy clan, though they bury it so deep they scarcely know
it’s there themselves. Steven and Anna can only have sex when she pretends to
be unconscious and under general anesthesia. Every interaction between family
members plays cold; polite, but chilly and disconnected.
Of all the disquieting flourishes Lanthimos includes, it’s
this cold delivery that proves the most unsettling. The actors read nearly
every line with flat, inflectionless, robotic precision. There’s almost no
emotion or feeling in spoken words. Crazy, traumatic, visceral struggles engulf
the family, but even in the midst of bedlam, even as Steven and Anna watch
their children paralyzed and in the hospital, their voices barely rise or fall.
And the same goes for the kids. They can’t walk, there’s no reason why, but
they might as well be talking about a particularly uninteresting history
assignment.
But the actors give all the other cues that usually go along with dialogue, using expressions, movement, body language, and all the other tools performers have at their disposal to communicate. Steven rages in every way but with his voice. Kidman’s full destructive force is on display in close ups where a blink or a subtle twinge in her eyebrow communicate more than any of her words. Martin’s words and intentions are all the more menacing for the absence of surface malice. It’s almost as if he’s disinterested in his efforts to destroy these people, and Keoghan is chilling.
Initially, this comes across as stilted and strange, an odd aesthetic
choice in a movie full of them. It’s not necessarily disturbing at first, but
it crawls under the surface, breaking apart the foundation so everything built
on top of that becomes unstable and perilous. All remains calm, even in moments
of startling violence. It’s an unnerving juxtaposition and it’s difficult for
the mind to rectify these disparate, contradictory elements. This causes
disquiet in an unusual way and also makes the sparse moments when voices do
rise all the more jarring.
Visually, The Killing of a Sacred Deer
unspools like Kubrick doing Hitchcock. Long, high-angle shots follow Steven
through antiseptic hospital hallways and it’s easy to imagine trailing Danny
Torrance through the Overlook Hotel. The frame pushes and pulls and tracks,
capturing the action from odd angles and vantage points that add yet another
level of discomfort and voyeuristic perspective. At one point, Nicole Kidman
utters the phrase, “Beautiful but lifeless,” which serves as an apt metaphor.
There’s a sterile, sanitized edge, and the family home is as stark and spotless,
and as cold and impersonal, as the hospital rooms.
Lanthimos also uses sound to great effect. The sonic design
ranges from blunt silence to classical needle drops to chaotic, cacophonous
racket that swells until it drowns out dialogue and ambient noise. Yet another
instance where the construction of the film aims to fluster the audience and
cause a spot of bother, never allowing sustained comfort.
I don’t know that I can say I like or love The
Killing of a Sacred Deer. It’s not that kind of easily classifiable
film; this isn’t a movie to throw on for a casual watch. And that’s what makes it
remarkable. Challenging and confrontational, it destroys expectations, toys
with emotions in unusual ways, and intentionally pushes the audience away while
daring them to come in.
The glacial pace and heightened sense of moral ambiguity
will surely turn off a wide swath of the audience. Yorgos Lanthimos’ latest is
destined to engender hate and adoration in equal measures, and probably
deserves everything it reaps, from accolades to condemnation. But as deliberately,
stubbornly off-putting as it is, The Killing of a Sacred
Deer is an endlessly fascinating watch and isn’t easily brushed
aside. [Grade: A]
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