A delicate coming-of-age story and tale of female friendship
mixed with squirm-inducing body horror, Lisa Bruhlmann’s debut, Blue
My Mind—which also happens to be her film school thesis—cast shades
of Raw, The Lure, and Cronenberg.
Luna Wedler delivers a bold, fearless performance as
15-year-old Mia. The new girl at school, she rebels against her overbearing mom
and clueless dad, and falls in with a crew of bad girls who smoke, drink, fuck,
and shoplift. As she navigates the world of dumb boys, creepy leering older
men, awkward sexual encounters, and taking Molly on a school trip to an
amusement park, she undergoes a startling metamorphosis that would make Kafka
proud.
Not only is this girl becoming a young woman, but her body
experiences other, less routine adolescent transformations as well. She
discovers webbing between her toes, deep purple bruises cover her legs, and she
has the sudden urge to gobble raw fish. But not like sushi, I’m talking pet
fish out of her mother’s prized aquarium.
Wedler stands out—if this movie was in English, she’d be the
next bit indie thing—but though she appears in almost every frame, she’s not
alone in her efforts. Zoe Pastelle Holthuizen plays Gianna, the queen bee mean
girl. But what begins as a stock high-school-movie cutout, evolves over time
into a much more complex, nuanced character than the woo-girl she initially
presents, and she plays both ends of the spectrum equally well.
Bruhlmann, who also wrote the script, uses the fantastic and
horrific to delve into themes of growing up, awakening sexually, and the
disorientation of trying to find your place in a world where you don’t fit. With
a dreamy intimacy that’s not always comfortable, not to mention a self-surgery
scene that may trigger gag reflexes, she crafts a lovely, assured, twisted look
at youth from a female perspective. A bit uneven at points, I can’t believe
it’s a first feature, let alone essentially a student film, and she announces
herself as a fierce new talent. Whatever she does next, I’m there.
[Grade: B+]
Blue My Mind plays the Seattle International Film Festival May 19 and May 28.
This looks like such an interesting watch and I would have totally missed it, thanks for highlighting it!
ReplyDeleteHope you enjoy it!
ReplyDelete