warning:
major spoilers
In
27-year old French director Alexandre Aja’s
homage to American slasher flicks, two unwittingly doomed
young women retreat to the countryside to study for their
college exams, but instead of finding peace and quiet they
are soon fighting for their lives. Unlike its role models
from the seventies and eighties, this movie boasts quality
acting, photography and sound. But it’s hard not to
have a low tolerance for High Tension’s cheap
tricks, namely relying on homophobia to deliver the “twist”
at the end.
Originally
released in France in 2003 as Haute Tension, the
movie opened in American theaters on June 10th with a translated
title and an overdubbed soundtrack. The director decided
to forgo subtitles so as not to distract from the suspense,
explaining on the movie’s official website that he
wanted American audiences to be able to experience his film
“on the same visceral level as French audiences.”
It’s hard to imagine what could be more distracting
from impending horror than visions of Pipi Longstocking.
But the movie hardly has any dialogue anyway, and before
you can remember the name Villa Villakula, gruesome brutality
takes center stage.
A
heinous killer shows up in the middle of the night and uses
a variety of hunting and woodworking implements to butcher
his victims, the entire family of one of the two women.
Without uttering a word he murders each one, the unflinching
camera sparing none of the gory details. The two girls are
the only survivors--Marie (Cecile de France) because she
manages to outwit him, and Alex (Maïwenn Le Besco)
because she is instead shackled and gagged and made to overhear
his sick handiwork before he spirits her away in his creepy
van.
From
then onward, Marie heroically attempts to rescue her friend,
cleverly sneaking into the getaway vehicle and bravely confronting
the killer in a bloody battle. When she finally kills him
with a hastily assembled mace followed by successful suffocation,
she returns to the van to free Alex from bondage.
But
instead of relief and gratitude, the traumatized
Alex turns on Marie, and we learn then that the killer and
Marie are one and the same. What we had been seeing was
Marie’s perspective, and her desire for Alex is so
repressed that it takes on an alter ego.
In this light, what had been a tale of revenge and fearless
loyalty becomes a fantasy of lesbian lust gone horribly
awry.
Marie’s
repressed desire for Alex is hinted at in a foreboding way.
On the drive to Alex’s family’s farmhouse, Marie
teasingly call Alex a slut, but it’s clear that there’s
more than friendly jealousy behind her complaint that Alex
“dumped” her for several hours and ran off with
a boy. Alex refers to Marie as a prude because she doesn’t
share the same interest in boys. But a different explanation
is suggested when, after arriving at the house and meeting
the whole family, Marie heads out to the swing set in the
yard for a smoke. From there she has a perfectly framed
view of Alex’s naked torso as the latter showers before
bed.
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