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In The Earth: Film Review

In The Earth: Film Review

In the 21st Century Folk Horror Revival, several names keep coming to the fore, among those are the partnership of British film director Ben Wheatley and screenwriter Amy Jump. Together they have previously brought us the new wave of folk horror gems Kill List (2011) and A Field in England (2013) as well as the tangentially associated Sightseers (2012) – a darkly humourous film that is akin to…


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Ben Wheatley with cast and crew while filming High-Rise (2015)Ben Wheatley with cast and crew while filming High-Rise (2015)Ben Wheatley with cast and crew while filming High-Rise (2015)Ben Wheatley with cast and crew while filming High-Rise (2015)Ben Wheatley with cast and crew while filming High-Rise (2015)Ben Wheatley with cast and crew while filming High-Rise (2015)Ben Wheatley with cast and crew while filming High-Rise (2015)

Ben Wheatley with cast and crew while filmingHigh-Rise(2015)


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Open up and let the Devil in.

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A Field in England, is a testament to Ben Wheatley’s skill in experimental filmmaking; in other words this is something you haven’t seen before. It is an awesome portrayal of macabre as well as subtle storytelling.

Amidst the English Civil War (during the 17th century) a servant that goes by Whitehead is charged with the task of finding an Irishman by the name of O'Neil. Whitehead flees from his handler’s grasp along with others who are fleeing from battle. Alone in a field, they are tricked into doing all the manual labor for an alchemist who had his assistant poison the deserters with psychedelic mushrooms, rendering them helpless to the normal conventions of reality, thus making them easier to control. And all this was done with the hopes of finding some kind of buried treasure.

A Field in England, in my opinion is a foray in the hypothetical, what if alchemy was real?

In this film I believe the director is saying it is and the concept is understood by a few, because after all it is taking place in the 17th Century.

There is a lot of showing and not telling during this movie, as the audience is forced to either sink or swim rather quickly. I understand that this film isn’t for everyone and it’s also not necessarily one’s own personal level of intelligence to understand or like this film, but rather your level of interest on the topic, or if you just enjoy great cinematography then you’ll like this film. Touching on the topic of the film; it’s about alchemy and the surge in interest it had during the 17th century under the guise that people thought they could transmute lead into gold.

Possible Spoilers (evidence from film to support my theory):

Whitehead is a homunculus (as he’s called one by his handler) and he was created by a man known simply as ‘master.’ I believe the Irishman he was charged to find, O'Neil, was an apprentice of Whitehead’s master who stole his notes on Alchemy and was able to teach himself the dark arts, this is why Whitehead was searching for him. O'Neil is later found buried, presumably in another realm as the deserters and Whitehead are forced to tug on a rope tied to a cryptic totem that later pulls O'Neil back onto their plane of existence.

O'neill also accuses Whitehead of knowing the location of the treasure as he’s taken into a tent and presumably tortured, but I think he was shown either a vision and or was 'activated’ by being force-fed these runes which allows his body to be a tool used to find things since he is homunculi; his body can technically be a vessel for other uses befitting of his creator. And afterwards when he’s done supposedly finding the location of the treasure he regurgitates the runes and is returned to a normal state of consciousness.

Wheatley does good in creating an atmosphere in which the most simple things are taught to be appreciated by the audience, for this film takes place during the English Civil War, and science is yet to fully blossom into what it is today, as the audience must grit their teeth through the poor hygiene that is gratuitously displayed throughout the film; which makes the film all that much more visceral to present day audience.

The tent scene was one of the most powerful scenes I have witnessed in cinema, as it is so simple, but the framing and the expression on the actor’s face as well as the music that plays over it gave it a haunting appeal as well as a dark and twisted fantastical sense of hilarity.

Overall I can say that this is a bit of sci-fi/thriller/period piece. Details that are captured is excellent even in an environment that is limited only by production budget but limitless in imagination as these 5 search the field for a treasure that only the supposed Whitehead himself knows of it’s whereabouts.

This is my first film I have seen from Wheatley and I like it a lot. It is a breath of fresh air, for his avant-garde style showed me something new, and daring for this is not a film that cannot ever possibly find commercial success but was still made in the name of art.

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3.5/4

-DK

In The Earth

2021, Ben Wheatley

Poster by Jay Shaw

l0kilee:

Tom Hiddleston reads an excerpt from Extreme Metaphors- Interviews with J G Ballard featuring an interview with the author from Search & Destroy; first published in 1978. 

Get the book here, read the original article here and check out the transcript of the snippet Tom reads below and see just how incredibly well Ballard predicts the growth and changes of our relationship with technology:

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#hiddles    #tom hiddleston    #high-rise    #ben wheatley    #j g ballard    #fascinating    #genuinely    
l0kilee:So… After being absolutely devastated that I had to give away my tickets to the High Rise l0kilee:So… After being absolutely devastated that I had to give away my tickets to the High Rise l0kilee:So… After being absolutely devastated that I had to give away my tickets to the High Rise l0kilee:So… After being absolutely devastated that I had to give away my tickets to the High Rise l0kilee:So… After being absolutely devastated that I had to give away my tickets to the High Rise l0kilee:So… After being absolutely devastated that I had to give away my tickets to the High Rise l0kilee:So… After being absolutely devastated that I had to give away my tickets to the High Rise l0kilee:So… After being absolutely devastated that I had to give away my tickets to the High Rise l0kilee:So… After being absolutely devastated that I had to give away my tickets to the High Rise l0kilee:So… After being absolutely devastated that I had to give away my tickets to the High Rise

l0kilee:

So…

After being absolutely devastated that I had to give away my tickets to the High Rise gala screening on Friday, I was still very much looking forward to seeing the movie this morning (11/10). 

You can imagine my surprise when before the film the director of the London Film Festival walks out and introduces the director Ben Wheatley who goes on to explain he will be doing a short Q&A after the film and that Tom Hiddleston will be joining him then, too. (!!!)

I couldn’t believe my luck! And then the film- well the film was just incredible. I’ve written a short (spoiler free!) post on my thoughts that you can read here

The following Q&A was amazing- I wasn’t prepared for one as I say so unfortunately I didn’t record much because the memory was almost all taken up on my phone and the pictures I got aren’t great either. Both Ben and Tom were delightfully insightful and funny and play off each other so well. Tom brought with him a book (Extreme Metaphors) containing an interview with J G Ballard from 1978 he found to be particularly poignant and read it aloud to us. Ballard was right on the money and despite it being decades before time he describes so well our relationship with technology it’s quite incredible. You can find the snippet Tom read to us here as well as the full article- which I highly recommend, here. As soon as a video appears of the Q&A I’ll be sure to share it with you guys. I got two small clips that I’ll post right after this.

After the Q&A I took a walk around the block because the crowd was insane and stumbled across the back exit to the cinema and a small group of people waiting so figured I’d give it a go too. Ben came out like a minute later and I got to tell him I thought the film was incredible as he was passing to go to the car. He signed for a few things and did a couple of photos I think but security were quick to move him along. Tom then came out and the same story- few photos, few signatures then got moved to the car. As he was just about to get in he was talking to a girl who’d gone round it then as he turned to climb in I called out thank you and he waved at the group, split second of eye contact then he was in the car and away. 

Words can’t explain how awesome today was. The film is everything I wanted and more and it is Tom’s best performance yet. You’re all gonna love it, I swear.


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1.Amour (Michael Haneke)

This masterful ode to death and dying is every bit as uncomfortable and unflinching as Michael Haneke’s sombre reputation suggests, but by adding a new found warmth to his repertoire, Amour is a film made remarkable in its simultaneously brutal and tender depiction of humanity.

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2. The Master (Paul Thomas Anderson)

Paul Thomas Anderson’s latest opus offers, among other things, an intensive study of men who lead and men looking to be led in post-war America. This cerebral approach to character makes for fascinating cinema, and although its mysteries may ultimately evade, The Master is as breathless a film as one would expect from America’s greatest showman.

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3.Tiny Furniture (Lena Dunham)

Building on the already solid foundations of mumblecore with the wit of Woody Allen, Lena Dunham’s painfully frank film about life after graduation is a thoroughly modern and disturbingly relatable examination of alienated youth and wasted talent.

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4.Rust and Bone (Jacques Audiard)

Jacques Audiard’s exquisite take on melodrama observes the blossoming relationship between a security guard and a whale trainer in the wake of a career-ending tragedy, but instead of descending into mawkishness, Audiard’s well judged restraint grounds the film in some kind of reality, allowing the central romance to develop in an organic, unsentimental way.

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5.The Innkeepers (Ti West)

By combining the twin terrors of ghost stories and existential crises, Ti West has found the perfect home for the thematic concerns of the mumblecore movement with a film that not only functions as A grade horror, but also as a terrifying parable for the modern youth.

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6.Alps (Yorgos Lanthimos)

The Hitchcockian idea of using doppelgangers to help appease grief is an inherently sick one, and Lanthimos’ steady, distant observations of how the frailties of such a process begin to surface are, while elusive, as morbidly fascinating as they are troubling.

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7. Once Upon A Time In Anatolia (Nuri Bilge Ceylan)

With its long, glacial takes, stunning photography and startlingly calm approach to narrative and character, Once Upon A Time In Anatolia offers an unusually lyrical, thematically rich take on the police procedural sub-genre.

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8.Laurence Anyways (Xavier Dolan)

The epitome of a hot mess, Xavier Dolan’s vivid dissection of transsexuality, romance and heartbreak is a gorgeously presented, decade spanning emotional epic reminiscent of the work of Pedro Almodovar, and although it lacks control, its bombastic style is more than enough to sustain its ambition.

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9.Sightseers (Ben Wheatley)

Taking cues from Badlands and the films of Mike Leigh, Ben Wheatley’s third film in as many years is an unabashedly violent, romantic and hilarious romp through the English countryside, blending horror and comedy to wonderful, if wholly British effect.

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10.Holy Motors (Leos Carax)

Leos Carax’s brazenly opaque oddity almost didn’t make this list, with its absurd, often hideous images serving to baffle rather than engage. But, for better or for worse, Holy Motors has stayed with me more than any other film this year, and that surely has to mean something.

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NOTE:This list is based on UK release dates.

pickledelephant:Ben Wheatley with cast and crew while filming High-Rise (2015) pickledelephant:Ben Wheatley with cast and crew while filming High-Rise (2015) pickledelephant:Ben Wheatley with cast and crew while filming High-Rise (2015) pickledelephant:Ben Wheatley with cast and crew while filming High-Rise (2015) pickledelephant:Ben Wheatley with cast and crew while filming High-Rise (2015) pickledelephant:Ben Wheatley with cast and crew while filming High-Rise (2015) pickledelephant:Ben Wheatley with cast and crew while filming High-Rise (2015)

pickledelephant:

Ben Wheatley with cast and crew while filmingHigh-Rise(2015)


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What’s So Great About That?: Episode 14
A Field In England: The Presence of Absence

Ben Wheatley’s ‘A Field In England’ contains many unusual creative choices, from using tableau to re-dubbing audio, but each decision seems to be directed at one thing: absence. But to what effect?

What’s So Great About That?: Episode 11
Kill List: The Folk Horror Revival

Folk Horror has evolved over the years, from The Wicker Man in 1973 to Kill List in 2012, but why are we afraid of Folk? What is Folk Horror all about?

#kill list    #ben wheatley    #folk horror    #video essay    #film analysis    #episodes    

What’s So Great About That?: Episode 6
Sightseers: Creativity in a Caravan

Ben Wheatley’s dark comedy Sightseers takes a particularly bloody road trip through the British countryside, but with murder discussed in the same breath as creative writing, are we to draw a connection between the two?

00:33:03 Anthony Royal: By the way, I hear you’re fucking 374.00:33:07 Robert Laing: Her name
00:33:03Anthony Royal: By the way, I hear you’re fucking 374.
00:33:07Robert Laing: Her name is Charlotte Melville.
00:33:11Anthony Royal: Yeah, Charlotte. That’s right. She has quite a tight cunt, as I recall. Believe me, I understand. At your age, straightforward, biological reason supervenes. But some of the people who live here, haven’t you’ve seen them? The vanguard of the well-to-do. They’ve fitted themselves so tightly into their slots that… they no longer have room to escape themselves.
00:33:45Robert Laing: Slots designed by you.
00:33:49Anthony Royal: I know. I’d conceived this building to be a crucible for change. I must have missed some vital element.

High-Rise (2015)


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Macabre, dark, violent and one of the funniest films of the year, ‘Sightseers’, the brain child of writers Alice Lowe and Steve Oram follows a couple as their caravanning holiday takes a homicidal turn. Directed by 'Kill List’’s Ben Wheatley and starring both Lowe and Oram in the lead roles, it is one of the most exciting British films to emerge in recent years. I spoke to Alice about developing the film, caravanning and improvisation. 

WHEN DID YOU GET BEN (WHEATLEY) INVOLVED WITH THE FILM?

Ben got involved about two years ago. Steve and I have been working on it for years and years and we’ve taken it from a live show double-act thing to TV idea to a short film to it just ending up on the internet. None of that really worked because the TV companies rejected it, they said it was really funny but it was just too dark but we were sure that we had made something that was good, we’d had such an amazing response on the internet. We sent it to Edgar Wright and he said that we should make it into a film, from there we took it to Nira Park (Producer) and she helped us to take it to Film 4. They helped to develop it with us and they paid for us to go on a research trip in a caravan! (Laughs)

We met Ben just before he was going to start filming Kill List, we’d seen Down Terrace and loved it and we knew him within the small world of comedy. He just seemed like the obvious fit, with the same naturalistic, improvisational style and there’s definitely an overlap of our sense of humour. Then, the fact that Kill List went on to become this huge hit was just really lucky for us, we kind of thought he might just go off to Hollywood, but he stuck by the project and it just worked really well and he really enhanced the project and gave it a fresh take, because when you’ve been working on something for so many years you need someone to come in and give a fresh spin.

WHY DID YOU WANT TO USE A NATURALISTIC STYLE?

I think because we know that murder is such a dramatic act, the most dramatic act that you can have. We wanted it to be believable, we wanted there to be a balance between that huge drama and I’m always interested in the banality of murder. We were fascinated by that juxtaposition – where you can seem like a really normal person but have these dark secrets. Naturalism, for me, is really, really important, particularly in comedy and we wanted to do something that fit into the British tradition, we wanted to do something that felt domestic and small and intimate.

YOU SAID THAT A LOT OF TV CHANNELS TURNED IT AWAY, WERE YOU EVER SCARED THAT PEOPLE JUST WOULDN’T GET IT?

No, the weird thing was that everyone loved it - that was the dispiriting thing - people would come back to us and say, “I laughed my ass off at this, it’s so funny…but I can’t possibly make it…sorry.” That was the frustrating thing because we were doing something we believed in and knew it was good quality.

Now obviously you have things like Dexter - 10 years down the line and American TV is doing much darker things mixed with comedy. For some reason British TV has become much more squeamish about those sorts of things and even though we used to show Twin Peaks and had Dennis Potter mixing it all up with things like The Singing Detective, but I think today things like that don’t really translate into ratings.

Film gives you more freedom to deal with the complexities of all the issues, we wanted it to be challenging and I think film audiences are much more prepared for that. I now just really want to work in film because there’s much more freedom to surprise people, you don’t have to fit into these little boxes, especially now, British film is doing some very exciting things and I definitely want to try to lever myself into that if possible! (Laughs)

HOW DID YOU RESEARCH FOR THE FILM, YOU SAID THAT THEY PAID FOR YOU TO GO ON A CARAVAN TRIP…

It was hilarious! It’s annoying going on holiday with anyone at the best of times…you have to really pick carefully who you’re going to go on holiday with (Laughs). Spending that much time with Steve (Oram, co-writer and co-star), we’re not in a relationship, we’ve never been in a relationship…it was quite funny being such a close quarters in the caravan and it was actually really valuable for the film. We kind of worked out what makes each other tick, what annoys each other, what dynamic we have as people and the characters are heavily based on ourselves and what we bring out of each other; we wouldn’t have found that out without that trip.

We were also responding to the landscape, it was such a change from London, it was so epic and beautiful and we thought it could really elevate the film, thinking of all the tragedy and drama associated with that environment.

IT HAS HAD AN AMAZING RECEPTION IN SO MANY PLACES, HOW DOES THAT FEEL?

Yeah, it has been great! I keep on expecting people to find it more offensive! We did actually get a really weird question at the Q&A, a woman went, “I think this film is really offensive towards northerners, because I’m northern and I think this is anti-northern.” We just looked at each other and didn’t know what to say, we mostly kill southerners in the film! (Laughs) We were just really flummoxed, coming from the Midlands - you cannot win – you’re not northern and you’re not southern, you don’t have a cool identity and that informed the film in some ways, this sense of being invisible. As a teenager I felt like that and I kind of became a bit of a new age Crusty, there were loads of castles and stuff about… and I just felt like going around in caravans and visiting stone circles…(Laughs)

YOU DEVELOPED THE CHARACTERS WITH STEVE…

Yeah, we just started to talking about family holidays and we just started improvising as these characters. It just came out quite organically, we were in those characters and started having arguments and it just happened so easily and the dark stuff came out quite naturally… (Laughs). At the same time idea felt so right, we just wondered why no one had done it before, and I was scared over the five years that we were developing it that someone would suddenly come along and have the same idea.

HOW DOES YOUR DYNAMIC WORK?

We use improvisation as a tool for writing; I don’t understand how people can do it any other way, it helps in writing jokes and creating a dynamic – you have different motivations as characters, it brings tension and personality. We sit in a room together and go through a whole period of just improvising and then we have work out the logistics of it all.

DO YOU FIND THAT QUITE HARD?

It was definitely a learning process, I feel much more confident about it now. I still don’t really understand what I’m doing but at least I know all the different stages. I’ve written another feature, I’d already finished it by last Christmas because I’ve been around the industry for long enough to know that everyone wants to know what you’re working on next and it’s been amazing how easy it’s been to find producers and people that want to help develop it. It’s sad that we have such a tradition of comedy here but that hasn’t translated to film recently, and I know everyone’s trying to rectify that. At the same time there was this element of us wondering whether we could do it, and now people do trust us and hopefully that will open it up to other writer-performers.

DOES IT FEEL STRANGE LETTING THE CHARACTERS GO AFTER YOU HAD BEEN WORKING ON THEM FOR SO LONG?

Yeah, it’s not like doing a television show where you can resurrect them again and again. We wanted the purity of the film and in some ways I was quite happy to leave them, I want to do a million other things and do characters that are completely different.

I just have to keep making my own opportunities because there just aren’t the roles for women that are that exciting and when there are there are so many actresses vying for them, like Charlize Theron is looking for challenging film parts! They just don’t come along often so I’m just trying to create them myself (Laughs).

CAN YOU TELL US A LITTLE BIT ABOUT YOUR NEXT PROJECT?

It’s called Lilly, it’s about a women who has a boring domestic life and she has a very fertile fantasy world which she lives in half of the time, it’s going to be a real mixture of media. It’s about having an inner world and having a motivation for something other than the life that you’re in, aspiring for something and deciding between that and love. You don’t really get strong, flawed, interesting female characters so I really want to challenge that, like Lars Von Trier get’s a lot of flack but he does create some of the most interesting and flawed female characters – that’s what I want. The screenwriter of Trainspotting once said that the purpose of film is for people to empathise with someone that they never normally would empathise with; film stretches your humanity, people have reasons for being damaged and there are reasons why they end up doing the things they do, it helps enhance our understanding and I think that’s really amazing. There are elements of that in Sightseers,these people are bad but there is still a history behind why they are the way they are, they’re damaged.

WHERE WOULD YOU LIKE TO SEE YOUR CAREER GO?

I sort of like to go from project to project, I’m a bit like a teenager! I need to find something that excites me, I’m not interested in fame or that sort of stuff, although unfortunately that does become a necessary evil if you want to be able to do the stuff you want to do. My whole thing now is daring to do what I want, like Kate Bush she is always daring and doesn’t listen to people who tell her that she can’t do something. I just want to carry on being creative and get a living out of it – that would just be a joy. I’ve just done a radio series and I’m going to do another one, it’s such fun because I get to work with a composer and experiment with sound.

…And I may be directing this next film (Laughs). I’m just open to doing everything, I might even write a novel at some point! Anything I can try to get my grubby paws on, I’ll do.

SIGHTSEERS

Interview: Emma Hurwitz

Portrait: Elliott Morgan

Stills courtesy of Studio Canal

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