With only four credited actors, three of whom get much screen time—there are additional performers draped in unsettling prosthetics—Gaia tells a relatively small story with eyes on grander themes. On a routine mission deep in the wilderness, park ranger Gabi (Monique Rockman) gets injured and separated from her partner, Winston (Anthony Oseyemi). A father-son survivalist duo, Barend (Carel Nel) and Stefan (Alex van Dyk), rescue her and take her to their deep-woods hovel. They live with a slavish devotion to nature, though their external off-the-grid posturing masks a deeper, darker mystery that unfolds in taut nightmare that blurs the lines between dream, reality, and hallucination.
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The film does, however, veer from this course as it unspools. Instead of tense and deliberate, at a certain point it becomes meandering and spins its wheels. Rooted in trauma and loss, Bouwer and Kapp unfurl Barend and Stefan’s backstory bit by measured bit, which often works but also occasionally shifts from mysterious to plain old plodding. There’s a fine line when it comes to this choice of tempo and pace, and Gaia doesn’t always stay true. After all, there are only so many times Gabi can wake in fright from a terrible dream before the move loses effectiveness.
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Full of anxiety and dread, Gaia is a cool, gorgeous looking film. It mixes horrific wounds, imaginative creature design, and creeping pressures into an unsettling, compelling package. Transformative eco-horror with a lot on its mind, the distinctive visuals and off-center mood are enough to smooth over most of the rough spots and make this well worth watching. [Grade: B]
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