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‘Somewhere Quiet’ Tribeca Review – Genre-Bending Character Study Re-Examines the Final Girl

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Writer/Director Olivia West Lloyd’s feature debut, Somewhere Quiet, picks up after a Final Girl has survived her horror story to examine the psychological toll of surviving. Emphasis on psychological; Somewhere Quiet isn’t interested in the inciting horror event itself but rather in interrogating the complexities that survival brings. It results in a self-assured, genre-bending debut that plunges its heroine into a paranoid nightmare where reality is never what it seems.

We meet Meg (Jennifer Kim) amidst a harrowing escape, bloodied and wandering the street alone. Her husband Scott (Kentucker Audley) comes from an affluent family, and kidnappers held Meg captive at ransom for months until she managed to escape. Readjusting to everyday life isn’t easy for Meg, so Scott suggests a quiet weekend away at his family’s seaside estate. Plans for relaxation and recovery go awry when Scott’s cousin Madeline (Marin Ireland) arrives unannounced. Madeline’s disruptive presence and passive-aggressive behavior wreak havoc on Meg, causing recent wounds to reopen as paranoia, nightmares, and horrifying reality shifts ensue.

Kim and Adler in Somewhere Quiet

Lloyd bides her time establishing an off-kilter atmosphere that effectively removes any sense of safety, familiarity, or bearings for her protagonist to grab hold of. Are the microaggressions from Madeline a result of aristocratic arrogance or something more sinister? Why does Scott continue to sleepwalk toward strange family photos of missionary work in Korea? The strange closeness, bordering near flirtation, between Scott and Madeline unnerves. Then there are the eerie visions and nightmares that increasingly threaten to cross into Meg’s waking life.

Kim deftly navigates Meg’s complicated arc, giving every single emotional high and low that comes with PTSD the necessary weight. Tenuous attempts to resume normality give way to small fractures of Scott and Meg’s picture-perfect weekend getaway, then builds with unease as Meg increasingly becomes sure that something’s deeply amiss. Kim impressively brings Meg’s internalized anguish, mistrust, pain, and confused sense of reality to the surface, often nonverbally. There’s nothing tidy or straightforward about recovery, and neither is Meg’s story; Somewhere Quiet centers around a protagonist afforded the space to toggle between empathetic, unreliable, and even unlikable. Audley and Ireland fare just as strongly in this character study.

Somewhere Quiet

It’s in the bold choice to refuse easy answers that Lloyd’s debut will polarize. Somewhere Quiet prefers to mine its psychological terror from drama over scares, though the filmmaker does inject a few nightmarish scenarios and horror when needed. Lloyd also refuses to handhold or offer easy answers; there are none. Red herrings and thematic teases enter the equation in the bid to paint a somber portrait of a woman who survived months in captivity only to discover she’s irrevocably changed in a world no longer the same. While Lloyd refreshingly gives her characters the space to be so profoundly broken and sometimes outright untrustworthy, it can sometimes make it tough to grasp Meg’s account, especially when the genre elements ramp up.

That Lloyd matches Meg’s erratic and occasionally volatile nature in tone and genre means Somewhere Quiet defies easy categorization. But it only contributes to the fascinating character study that steadfastly withholds artificial catharsis. For those that don’t mind wading into the darker recesses of a fractured mind, Somewhere Quiet offers a melancholic, intimate, and moody seaside epilogue of a Final Girl’s story.

Somewhere Quiet made its world premiere at the Tribeca Film Festival.

3 skulls out of 5

Horror journalist, RT Top Critic, and Critics Choice Association member. Co-Host of the Bloody Disgusting Podcast. Has appeared on PBS series' Monstrum, served on the SXSW Midnighter shorts jury, and moderated horror panels for WonderCon and SeriesFest.

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“Chucky” Season 3 Finale Review – A Satisfying Conclusion to a Delightfully Unhinged Season

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Chucky season 3 finale - John Waters

What a whirlwind. Chucky” Season 3 let the killer doll loose in the White House, where he unleashed multiple bloodbaths, temporarily gained control of the nuclear weapons, and even faced his greatest fear, death, along with the wrath of Damballa. The season finale, appropriately titled “Final Destination,” has a lot of ground to cover, yet Chucky (Brad Dourif) is still running amok in the spirit realm while Tiffany (Jennifer Tilly) hopes for one final Hail Mary to escape death. Luckily, the super-sized episode packs in the revelations while tying up the season’s loose ends and paying tribute to the franchise’s past. It all makes for a satisfying capper to another delightfully unhinged season.

While “Final Destination” hits the ground running with explosive action, it also doesn’t waste any time exploring the aftermath of Jake Wheeler (Zackary Arthur) choosing to die temporarily in the hopes of finding Caroline (Carina Battrick). Devon (Bjorgvin Arnarson), Lexy (Alyvia Alyn Lind), and Grant (Jackson Kelly) keep watch over Jake’s body while his spirit confronts ghosts of the past. With a very limited amount of time before death becomes permanent, Jake’s inherently risky plan becomes even more precarious when it comes to Chucky. 

Chucky - Jake, Devon, and Lexy

CHUCKY — “Final Destination” Episode 308 — Pictured in this screengrab: (l-r) Bjo?rgvin Arnarson as Devon Evans, Zackary Arthur as Jake Wheeler, Alyvia Alyn Lind as Lexy Cross — (Photo by: SYFY)

The episode serves as an excellent showcase for Zackary Arthur, who gets to explore new sides to Jake. It’s not just Chucky or the White House’s past that haunts the teen here, but his past, too. An emotionally charged confrontation threatens violence, but Jake instead finds closure. It’s a poignant, impactful moment that grounds the campy horror comedy but more importantly highlights just how far Jake has come with self-acceptance and self-love. That Jake is also trying to outsmart Chucky means that “Final Destination” also lets Arthur go toe-to-toe with Dourif in deeply entertaining ways. Arthur deftly navigates both the episode’s sentimental moments and the outlandish horror turns with ease, demonstrating infectious comedic timing with the latter.

“Final Destination” also finally delivers on John Waters’ return to the franchise, this time as the eccentric Wendell Wilkins, creator of the Good Guys doll. Waters’ humor suits “Chucky” well and makes for another welcome addition to this twisted horror family. How Wendell factors into the finale is for you to discover, but the character reiterates the franchise’s consistency with and respect for its own history. It’s a feat worth celebrating, considering Chucky’s reign of terror has lasted more than three decades and is still going strong with Don Mancini leading the charge.

Chucky season 3 finale - fiery set

CHUCKY — “Final Destination” Episode 308 — Pictured in this screengrab: (l-r) Kaleb Horn as Timmy Nash, Zackary Arthur as Jake Wheeler — (Photo by: SYFY)

The finale continues the series’ knack for pushing the franchise forward in unexpected ways but with an added layer of retrospection. That also extends to Jake Wheeler and his found family in Devon and Lexy, all of whom have grown immensely since their introduction in season one. “Final Destination” looks to the past as a means of showing just how far its characters have come. That it does so without ever scaling back the camp humor or outrageously gory body count is a tricky needle to thread. “Chucky” Season 3 winds down with a satisfying conclusion that doles out punishing losses and triumphant wins, with more than a few surprises and lingering questions. 

The only significant disappointment is that “Final Destination” ends the season on such a daring note that the wait for the not-yet-announced next season is already unbearable. 

The finale of “Chucky” Season 3 airs Wednesday, May 1 at 10/9c on USA & SYFY.

4 out of 5 skulls

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