Connect with us

Reviews

[Fantastic Fest Review] ‘Alone With You’ Is a Mixed Bag of Queer Paranoia

Published

on

Alone With You Review

Single-setting horror films almost always make for a fascinating watch. Films like Buried, Cube and Frozen force their directors to make the most of their sparse surroundings, usually with a limited budget. In these films, the locales are practically their own characters. Executed poorly, and these films risk putting the audience to sleep. More and more of these films are coming out of the woodwork in the pandemic era, which brings us to Alone With You, a paranoid thriller in the vein of Roman Polanski’s Repulsion that adds a welcome layer of queerness to the proceedings. However, the execution is somewhat of a mixed bag.

As makeup artist Charlie (Emily Bennett) painstakingly prepares a romantic homecoming for her girlfriend Simone (Emma Myles, Orange is the New Black) in their Brooklyn apartment, she is interrupted by a jarring call from her religious mother (Barbara Crampton, Re-AnimatorYou’re Next) with the news that her grandmother has passed away. After enduring several of her mother’s microaggressions, Charlie becomes trapped in her apartment with no way out. The digital clocks have all been erased and the windows are covered in a dark material, blocking her view of the outside world. Oh, and there’s a mysterious voice coming out of her air vent.

Bennet pulls triple duty here, co-writing and co-directing Alone With You with Justin Brooks in their feature debut. Filmed during the pandemic lockdown, Alone With You takes place almost entirely in Charlie and Simone’s apartment, with the occasional flashback to a deserted beach, where we see Charlie in moments of distress. Interior single-setting thrillers like this almost always depend on a sense of claustrophobia, and Alone With You succeeds at this in fits and starts. They’re fighting a losing battle with the setting, as the apartment isn’t really that claustrophobic (it’s two stories), but Bennett and Brooks use the camera in a way that makes the space feel confined. A standout sequence in a dark, cramped room filled with mannequins is when the film is at its most unsettling. Unfortunately, this tension isn’t sustained throughout the duration of the film.

Alone With You Review

While Bennett is present in every scene of the film, she does occasionally gets to share the screen with other people on, well, other screens (this is a COVID-shot film, after all). Brief FaceTime calls with her mother and best friend Thea (Dora Madison, VFW) are peppered throughout, but Bennett is the focus here. She is tasked with carrying the film by herself and she is more than up to the task. The script, on the other hand, struggles to maintain suspense throughout its admittedly brief 83-minute runtime, more focused on delaying a third act reveal instead of building tension.

It’s not that that the aforementioned revelation is the problem, but rather that it’s made painfully obvious if you’re paying attention (and especially so if you know this particular sub-genre). When the reveal finally comes, one can’t help but feel a bit disappointed. Alone With You would have worked better had it opened with said reveal and moved on from there, working as a character study through a horror lens, but sadly that’s not the film we have.

Adding extra layers to the film is the queer aspect, and it’s this aspect that makes Alone With You worth a watch. The film doesn’t delve too much into Charlie’s backstory, but some viewers will put the pieces of the puzzle together simply based on minute details incorporated into the dialogue. Charlie’s mother uses certain trigger words and phrases that speak volumes about the person Charlie is today (referring to her lifestyle as her “choice,” calling Simone her “roommate,” etc.). I, as a queer viewer, know the harsh toll these words can take on someone’s psyche. I also know why Charlie has become co-dependent in her relationship and doesn’t have many friends that she can call her own. The film doesn’t do much in the way of addressing these things, though, and that can make the film’s character work seem half-baked at times. It’s a nice effort, but it’s unfortunate that the film seems content with simply letting the audience do most of the work.

Alone With You is a film in which the idea behind it is more interesting than film itself, but that doesn’t mean it’s not worth checking out. It’s a promising debut feature for Bennett and Brooks, and while the idea is there, the execution leaves something to be desired.

A journalist for Bloody Disgusting since 2015, Trace writes film reviews and editorials, as well as co-hosts Bloody Disgusting's Horror Queers podcast, which looks at horror films through a queer lens. He has since become dedicated to amplifying queer voices in the horror community, while also injecting his own personal flair into film discourse. Trace lives in Austin, TX with his husband and their two dogs. Find him on Twitter @TracedThurman

Reviews

“Chucky” Season 3: Episode 6 Review – Ghosts and Gore Plunge the White House into Chaos and Terror

Published

on

Chucky season 3 episode 6 review "Panic Room"

The story threads converge in “Panic Room,” the sixth episode of Chucky Season 3. In the previous episode, a death row-bound Tiffany (Jennifer Tilly) demanded that a dying Chucky (voiced by Brad Dourif) “go down in a blaze of glory and take as many with you on your way out.” Considering the last episode also ended with the gruesome eye gouging of President James Collins (Devon Sawa), “Panic Room” plunges the White House into chaos and terror as Chucky lays the groundwork for his most ambitious plan yet.

Warren Pryce (Gil Bellows) continues to reveal his true colors, giving First Lady Charlotte Collins (Lara Jean Chorostecki) no room to grieve, let alone process what’s happened, before he enlists a clean-up crew to cover up the President’s death. Charlotte attempts to shield her children from the truth, even as she can barely hold it together, but finds herself plagued by ghosts in more ways than one. Jake Wheeler (Zackary Arthur), Devon (Bjorgvin Arnarson), and Lexy (Alyvia Alyn Lind) return to the White House once more under a scheduled playdate with Grant (Jackson Kelly), just in time for Chucky’s bid for White House control.

Devon Sawa as dead President James Collins in Chucky season three

CHUCKY — “Death Becomes Her” Episode 305 — Pictured in this screengrab: Devon Sawa as James Collins — (Photo by: SYFY)

“Panic Room” emphasizes Charlotte’s dire plight to effectively establish the stakes that go beyond Chucky. Chorostecki gives a rousing physical performance as a woman caught between duty, family, and her own agency. As if that’s not enough, the supernatural confrontations continue, ramping up the horror and the worldbuilding thanks to the highly haunted White House. Charlotte isn’t coping well with any of it, and the arrival of a familiar face threatens to send her over the edge.

With so many of Warren Pryce’s minions about, Chucky has plenty of fodder to cull in delightfully gory ways, once again showcasing the series’ fantastic puppetry and SFX work. The aged doll design is exquisitely detailed, down to thinning silver hair and age spots, evoking an eerie uncanny valley between Good Guy toy and a real geriatric human. Brad Dourif’s spirited, reliable voiceover work further sells the effect, and continues to demonstrate that there are always new facets to the horror icon to discover.

Lara Jean Chorostecki as Charlotte Collins looking scared

CHUCKY — “Panic Room” Episode 306 — Pictured in this screengrab: Lara Jean Chorostecki as Charlotte Collins — (Photo by: SYFY)

Jake, Devon, and Lexy are tenacious in their bid to thwart Chucky and retrieve Lexy’s sister, but they’re consistently multiple steps behind the pint-sized killer. “Panic Room” and the back half of Season 3 drive home why: there are no rules when it comes to Chucky. The highly adaptable killer may have a twisted moral code of his own- a gun lecture amidst a murder spree is so very Chucky. But he has no interest in predictability or authority. That extends to the voodoo that landed a dying killer in a doll’s body, one that’s now corrupted by Christian magic from a botched exorcism.

That development, along with the White House’s unique setting, means that anything can happen. There’s a thrill in the “anything goes” attitude and in the darkly funny ways that the series’ characters react to new developments.

The episode operates almost entirely on tension from Charlotte’s plight and Chucky’s maniacal machinations, clicking the moving parts into place and carefully maneuvering its players together for the final two episodes of the season. It builds to an insane conclusion with massive consequences for the final two episodes of the season. That forward momentum is thrilling but more exciting is what’s yet to come, thanks to the episode’s intriguing final frame.

“Chucky” Season 3: Part 2 airs Wednesdays at 10/9c on USA & SYFY.

3.5 out of 5

Continue Reading