PERPETRATOR – Review

Yes, it’s getting darker a bit earlier and the temps are finally (whew) easing up and cooling off. So many folks are thinking of Fall, and aside from sweaters and pumpkin spice everything, Halloween is on their minds (and in the aisles of several retail chains). And we’re ready for some good scary flicks, and not family-friendly fare like the failed reboot of HAUNTED MANSION. Now we’ve already hit the high seas with Dracula, maybe we could get a modern twist on the classic monster folklore. Is the setting for this flick another rotting ship or a decaying estate or castle? Nope, it’s a locale even more frightening, high school (Carrie White and Buffy Summers would heartily agree). And the villain? For this gory lil’ indie, it’s not clear exactly who or what is the actual PERPETRATOR.

Could it be nearly eighteen-year-old Jonny (Kiah McKirnan)? After all, she’s committing a bit of B&E (breaking and entering) when we first meet her on the dark, cold streets of Chicago. After a trek to the van of her “fence” to sell the “merch” and build up the bucks for a getaway, she’s back in the squalid basement apartment (perhaps they’re “squatters) she shares with her nervous dad. He’s noticed that her weird nosebleeds have become more frequent. And due to his own “plasma issues”, he decides that she needs to travel across town to live with his sister, her aunt Hildie (Alicia Silverstone). Jonny feels an unsettling “vibe” from her as she enters the dark, gothic brownstone. But there’s little time for a reunion as Jonny must get her attire ready as she enrolls in a fancy nearby prep school. Of course, that place is another level of creepy. The manic Principal Burke (Christoper Lowell) delights in staging “massacre drills”. The school nurse’s face is nearly covered with various bandages. And it seems that there’s a new missing female student every other day, as the bulletin board is filled with “Have You Seen…” flyers. This leads to more strange dreams for Jonny complete with eerie blood imagery. Over the next few days, she befriends several of the other young woman and eventually they zero in on a possible suspect in the disappearances. Jonny offers herself as “bait”, but will her bizarre blood behaviors and quirks lead to a capture or another flyer with her face?

Though the role referred to in the title is unclear, the story is carried by the compelling Ms. McKirnan. She’s up for the demands of Jonny, whether being tough (standing up to loads of jerks) or vulnerable, as she begins to open up with a classmate. Through the sneer and eyeliner, McKirnan lets us see the confusion in Jonny’s eyes as she tries to deal with the changes in her mind and body (this is puberty from Hell). She makes us eager to join her on Jonny’s journey. A bonus is her unique “hair accents” since her ‘do changes radically with each new scene. Oh, and her work with Silverstone really “crackles”. The iconic CLUELESS star delivers a quirky, mannered performance as the haughty, aristocratic Hildie (channeling a bit of Dame Judith Anderson from REBECCA or Gale Sondergard is loads of “B” flicks). On the opposite end of the intensity spectrum, there’s Lowell who takes the energy level past 11 as the nutty, frantic overlord of the school (he’s so happy during the “drills”). Kudos also to Melanie Libard as a mystery woman from Jonny’s past.

Certainly, there’s a lot going on in writer/director Jennifer Reeder’s newest fear flick (she’s bounced between indie shockers and shorts). The story moves along well despite several absurd plot conventions (a “grab” in front of the house). Many ideas are in play, but feel like scenes from several different stories, very different in tone. Is it a “coming of age” horror allegory (much like the recent BONES AND ALL)? Is it a variation of the “teen girls in peril” ala SPLIT? Or perhaps a riff on the 80s teen comedies with the cool but not that popular kids versus the uptight adults in charge. Thrown in is also a same-sex romance that feels hastily tossed in and forgotten. We even get a spin on inherited “mutations” though it may also be mystical powers (her blood is very…busy). The mystery elements aren’t too difficult to solve despite the full-head rubber mask and muffled speech of the “grabber”. And the humor falls fairly flat (really, a whole auditorium chanting the same obscenity). The Windy City locales add to the smothering gloom, much like Hildie’s “crib” and the school. We get an attempt to “tie up” and explain things in the last moments, but the denouncement feels hurried. The attempt to create a new “spin” on horror mythology is admirable, but the finished film is much less than the sum of its scenes and visuals for this PERPETRATOR.

2 Out of 4

PERPETRATOR opens in select theatres and screens exclusively on Shudder beginning on Friday, September 1, 2023

Check Out The Trailer For Jennifer Reeder’s PERPETRATOR

From the director of NIGHT’S END, comes filmmaker Jennifer Reeder’s new film PERPETRATOR.

Anna Bogutskaya, (The Playlist) calls it “A Trip Dripping In Blood & Atmosphere. Takes influence from giallo films and teenage classics like Heathers to craft a world that blends the kitsch and the uncanny.”

Jordan Mintzer, (The Hollywood Reporter) says it’s “Transgressive and true to itself. Somewhere between camp and Cronenberg lies Perpetrator.”

Jude Dry, (IndieWire) says it’s “An ambitious addition to the feminist horror genre with blood and guts to spare. Silverstone is a steely delight.”

Streaming on Shudder and opening in Select Theaters on September 1st, check out the trailer for PERPETRATOR.

Jonny Baptiste (Kiah McKirnan) is a reckless teen sent to live with her estranged Aunt Hildie (Alicia Silverstone). On her 18th birthday, she experiences a radical metamorphosis: a family spell that redefines her called Forevering. When several teen girls go missing at her new school, a mythically feral Jonny goes after the Perpetrator.

Jennifer Reeder constructs personal fiction films about relationships, trauma and coping. Her award-winning narratives are innovative and borrow from a range of forms including after school specials, amateur music videos and magical realism. These films have shown consistently around the world, including the Sundance Film Festival, The Berlin Film Festival, The Tribeca Film Festival, The Rotterdam Film Festival, The London Film Festival, SXSW, The Venice Biennale and The Whitney Biennial.

Read our review of NIGHT’S END here.

Reeder was named by Oscar winning director Bong Joon Ho (PARASITE) as a filmmaker to watch in the 2020s.

She won a Creative Capital Grant in Moving Image in 2015, short film funding from Rooftop/Adrienne Shelly Foundation in 2016 and short film funding from the Hamburg Film Fund in 2016. She was a USA Artist nominee for 2008, 2015, 2016, 2017 and 2020. She was a Herb Alpert Film Award nominee in 2018. She won a 2018/19 scriptwriting award from SFFIM/Rainin Foundation. She is the 2019 recipient of the Alpert Film Award residency at the MacDowell Colony.

Her most recent film, KNIVES AND SKIN was theatrically released in France in November 2019 through UFO and in the US in December 2019 through IFC Midnight.

First Look Clip And Festival Poster Released for Jennifer Reeder’s Horror-Noir PERPETRATOR Starring Kiah McKirnan And Alicia Silverstone

Shudder has released the new festival poster and first-look clip from Jennifer Reeder’s upcoming horror-noir PERPETRATOR, set to world premiere at the Berlin International Film Festival Friday, February 17. The Shudder Original Film stars Kiah McKirnan (Mare of Easttown), Christopher Lowell (MY BEST FRIEND’S EXORCISM, PROMISING YOUNG WOMAN), Melanie Liburd (The Idol), Ireon Roach (CANDYMAN [2021]), and Alicia Silverstone (CLUELESS, KILLING OF A SACRED DEER) and is produced by Gregory Chambet for WTFilms and Derek Bishé for Divide/Conquer.

Written and directed by Reeder, PERPETRATOR follows Jonny (McKirnan), a reckless teen sent to live with her estranged Aunt Hildie (Silverstone). On her 18th birthday, she experiences a radical metamorphosis: a family spell that redefines her called Forevering. When several teen girls go missing at her new school, a mythically feral Jonny goes after the Perpetrator.

PERPETRATOR is Reeder’s second feature to screen at Berlinale following the 2019 break-out hit KNIVES AND SKIN, which IFC Midnight released theatrically, and marks her third collaboration with Shudder, preceded by NIGHT’S END (2022), featuring Michael Shannon, and the critically acclaimed anthology entry V/H/S/94 (2021), which revived the widely popular found-footage horror franchise. Reeder was named one of Bong Joon Ho’s 20 upcoming directors for the 2020s, and her shorts and features have shown at festivals and museums around the world, including Sundance, Berlin, SXSW, The Whitney Biennial, and The Venice Biennale.

The full cast includes Casimere Jollette (Tiny Pretty Things), Ilirida Memedovski (THE BOOK OF BIRDIE), Sasha Kuznetsov, and Greta Stolte. PERPETRATOR is lensed by Sevdije Kastrati and edited by Justin Krohn. Previous KNIVES AND SKIN collaborators, costume designer Kate Grube and production designer Adri Siriwatt, return for Reeder’s latest.

Trevor Groth and Sarah Hong executive produced for 30West (TRIANGLE OF SADNESS), along with Adam Hendricks and Greg Gilreath for Divide/Conquer, Dimitri Stephanides for WTFilms as well as Emily Gotto for Shudder.

Alicia Silverstone Battles Killer Sharks! THE REQUIN In Theaters, on Demand and Digital January 28th – Here’s the Trailer

THE REQUIN stars Alicia Silverstone (Clueless) and James Tupper (“Big Little Lies”). The film was written and directed by Le-Van Kiet (Furie). Saban Films will release the thriller film THE REQUIN in theaters, on demand and digital January 28, 2022.

Here’s the scary trailer:

There’s terror in paradise when Jaelyn (Alicia Silverstone) and Kyle (James Tupper) arrive at a remote seaside villa in Vietnam for a romantic getaway. A torrential storm descends, reducing the villa to little more than a raft and sweeping the young couple out to sea. Suddenly, another danger appears: a school of great white sharks. With her injured husband watching helplessly, Jaelyn must battle the deadly predators alone in this tense thriller that rides an unrelenting wave of fear.

THE REQUIN is rated R for language and some grisly images

THE LODGE Gets A Release Date – November 15, 2019

NEON Films has released the release date for the very scary upcoming movie, THE LODGE.

Hitting theaters on November 15, the movie stars Riley Keough, Jaeden Lieberher, Lia McHugh, Alicia Silverstone, and Richard Armitage.

A bone-chilling nightmare from the directors of GOODNIGHT MOMMY, THE LODGE follows a family who retreat to their remote winter cabin over the holidays. When the father (Richard Armitage) is forced to abruptly depart for work, he leaves his children, Aidan (IT’s Jaeden Martell) and Mia (Lia McHugh) in the care of his new girlfriend, Grace (Riley Keough). Isolated and alone, a blizzard traps them inside the lodge as terrifying events summon specters from Grace’s dark past.

Colin Farrell and Nicole Kidman Star In First Trailer For THE KILLING OF A SACRED DEER

In theaters October 27 is director Yorgos Lanthimos’ (THE LOBSTER, DOGTOOTH), THE KILLING OF A SACRED DEER starring Colin Farrell and Nicole Kidman.

The strange relationship between a cardiac surgeon and a 16-year-old boy portends a terrifying sacrifice, in this eagerly awaited supernatural thriller.

Check out the brand new trailer for the film now.

The film will have its North American premiere at the 2017 Toronto International Film Festival.

https://www.facebook.com/sacreddeermovie

Anchor Bay Films Picks Up Director Amy Heckerling’s VAMPS; Stars Alicia Silverstone And Sigourney Weaver

Anchor Bay Films announced today the acquisition of all North American distribution rights to the latest film by Amy Heckerling (Clueless, Fast Times at Ridgemont High), VAMPS. Starring Alicia Silverstone (Clueless, Batman & Robin), Krysten Ritter (“Don’t Trust the B—- in Apartment 23,” Confessions of a Shopaholic), Wallace Shawn (Toy Story, Princess Bride) and Sigourney Weaver (Aliens, Avatar), the film combines the fun of the classic hit Clueless with the tremendous popularity of vampires. A theatrical release is expected near Halloween. The deal was announced by Bill Clark, President of Anchor Bay Entertainment.

“We are excited to have picked up the rights to VAMPS,” commented Kevin Kasha, Executive Vice President, Acquisitions and Co-Productions for Anchor Bay Films. “It’s a hilarious story with the perfect cast.”

Beautiful vampires Goody (Silverstone) and Stacy (Ritter) have been enjoying the good life in New York City. As upstanding, politically correct Extended Life Forms (ELFs), the pair hit a support group, “Sanguines Anonymous,” to help curb the temptation of human blood in between their clubbing and dating schedules. When love steals into each of their lives, the pair’s destiny is set on a new course and they must make a choice that will jeopardize their immortality—and maybe much more.

Written and directed by Amy Heckerling, VAMPS is a comedy-fantasy-romance that puts a fresh and hilariously upbeat twist on the vampire genre. In addition to Wallace Shawn and Sigourney Weaver, the film also stars Dan Stevens (“Downton Abbey”), Richard Lewis (“Curb Your Enthusiasm”), Justin Kirk (“Weeds”), Kristen Johnston (Bride Wars), Malcolm McDowell (The Artist, A Clockwork Orange), Zak Orth (Romeo + Juliet) and Marilu Henner (Johnny Dangerously). It was produced by Lauren Versel, Molly Hassell, Stuart Cornfeld and Maria Teresa Arida. Executive Producers include Stanislaw Tyczynski, Julie Kroll, Kamal Nahas, John Jencks, Lisa Wilson, Stephen Hays and Peter Graham. VAMPS was produced by Lucky Monkey Pictures and Red Hour Films. The deal was negotiated by Kevin Kasha, Josh Thomashow and Marc Barson for Anchor Bay Films; Cassian Elwes, Kevin Iwashima and Julie Kroll negotiated the deal on behalf of the filmmakers.

“Like” VAMPS on Facebook:  https://www.facebook.com/VampsMovie

Follow on Twitter:  @VampsMovie

Anchor Bay Films recent releases include Seeking Justice starring Nicolas Cage, January Jones and Guy Pearce which opened on March 18th  and Touchback starring Brian Presley which opened on April 13th.  Films in its library include the critically-acclaimed comedy City Island starring Andy Garcia and Solitary Man starring Michael Douglas as well as the 2011 releases of Kill the Irishman starring Ray Stevenson, Vincent D’Onofrio, Val Kilmer and Christopher Walken, Toronto Film Festival award-winner Beautiful Boy with Maria Bello and Michael Sheen and Cannes 2011 premiere Corman’s World.