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‘Love Lies Bleeding’ Sundance Review – Kristen Stewart Shines in Ultra-Violent Genre-Bending Thriller

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Love Lies Bleeding Trailer, Love Lies Bleeding Review

Filmmaker Rose Glass has an audacious way of exploring obsession, pushing it to extremes in beguiling, genre-defying ways. Her feature debut, Saint Maud, centered on a nurse who took her religious fanaticism to extremes, compounded by an obsession with her latest patient. Glass’s sophomore effort, Love Lies Bleeding, wields obsession as a destructive coping mechanism for the pain that love can inflict. With a visionary at the helm and an impressive cast willing to follow along with every wild turn thrown at them, Love Lies Bleeding makes for a captivating ‘80s set crime thriller unafraid to get deeply weird and ultra-violent.

Love Lies Bleeding introduces Lou (Kristen Stewart) as she’s elbow-deep cleaning out a clogged toilet at the gym where she works in her dusty Nevada town. Lou seems aloof and disinterested in everything, even the strong, unwanted advances by Daisy (Anna Baryshnikov). Lou would love to leave town and never look back but feels obligated to look after her sister Beth (Jena Malone), considering Beth’s husband JJ (Dave Franco) is prone to cruel violence. That all changes the moment Lou lays eyes on bodybuilder Jackie (Katy O’Brian), a drifter making their way to Vegas with dreams of championship on her mind. The sparks between Lou and Jackie are electric, but the road to freedom will come paved with violence and pain thanks to Lou’s entanglement with her crime lord father, Lou Sr. (Ed Harris).

There’s a simplicity to Glass’s latest, co-written with Weronika Tofilska, in characterization and setting. There’s no pretense to any of the characters; they wear or state their wants and desires plain as day. Glass begins her delirious neo-noir with a straightforward leanness that eases you into a weird pocket of Americana where most of the town residents are sporting mullets, even Lou Sr. The characters are almost too simple, often leaving them in a state of confusion when things derail. And oh boy, do they derail. Don’t look for rationality in this town; you won’t find it.

Glass brings the town and its denizens to life through sheer style- Lou’s flashbacks to painful familial memories are saturated with vibrant, violent red- and profound character quirks. Lou, for example, wants to impress Jackie, so she brings out a case of illegal performance-enhancing drugs meant to help bulk her up ahead of the bodybuilding competition in Vegas. This subtle, peculiar moment will irrevocably alter the couple’s course toward the insane. There’s also a surprising sense of humor; Glass and the cast know how absurd this setup can be and lean into it often.

The tipping point ushers in shocking violence that splatters blood and tissue everywhere, and it’s here where Glass takes the training wheels off. The further Lou and Jackie spiral out of control, the more Glass begins to play with genres, form, and surrealism. What begins as a neo-noir built upon the classic compulsive romance soon unravels into a skillful patchwork of genres, from body horror hallucinations to western-style gunfights, albeit with Glass’s particular offbeat touch. Most impressive is how Glass streamlines all of the competing genres and tones into one cohesive, singular vision.

For all the wild turns and gruesome bursts of violence and dead bodies, it’s the cast that shines brightest. Harris’ cool crime boss earns admiration despite knowing what he’s capable of. Baryshnikov’s Daisy is a scene stealer for her utter weirdness, and Malone is well cast as Lou’s oddball sister. But the movie belongs to Stewart, who uplifts every scene partner, and O’Brian, who grows more assured and confident in her role as the events progress into complete madness.

That it devolves into madness, complete with humor and surreal imagery, means that it’s the precise type of gonzo cinema that’ll likely prove divisive. But Glass makes it so easy to fall on this movie’s wavelength, and the unpredictability of it keeps you deeply invested and often breathless from the suspense. Obsession transforms Lou and Jackie’s love into a toxic, destructive force that’s electrifying, even if a bit simple. It makes for an exhilarating sophomore effort from a visionary.

Love Lies Bleeding made its World Premiere at the Sundance Film Festival. A24 will release it in limited theaters on March 8, 2024.

4 out of 5 skulls

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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Lifetime’s ‘Death Down the Aisle’ Is All Business and Red Herrings [Review]

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Death Down the Aisle begins with the tantalizing image of a bride, Malorie (Jess Brown), dressed in a wedding dress splattered with blood.

This is a brief (unnecessary) in media res opening before writer Audrey C. Marie jumps the action back to earlier in the day. It’s the day of the wedding, Malorie is preparing to wed Jon (David Alexander) and there’s a whirlwind introduction of wedding guests, many of whom are either family, work associates from Jon’s legal firm, or both.

Most of these relationships aren’t clear until after Jon’s death (this isn’t a spoiler; his death is heavily telegraphed by director Roxanne Boisvert). Only after the murder does it become clear that Death Down The Aisle is primarily interested in exploring red herrings, gossipy busy bodies, and characters making A LOT of phone calls.

Let’s rewind: Malorie is marrying Jon, an older man with an adult daughter, Bridget (Anna Kopacek), who looks nearly the same age as her. Jon works at Stone Legal Services with his brother Zach (Scott Gibson), as well as Malorie’s mother, Pamela (Jayne Heitmeyer) and Zach’s younger girlfriend, Amy (Gracie Callahan).

Each of these characters hand Jon a drink before the wedding begins – Zach – a Scotch, Amy – a coffee, and Pamela – an energy drink. There’s also a mysterious glass of champagne delivered to Malorie’s room that Jon drinks and Boisvert ensures that the audience keeps track of each of them by zooming in each time. This is why it’s no surprise when Jon keels over mid-ceremony, coughs up blood on Malorie’s dress, and immediately croaks.

Naturally it turns out that nearly everyone had a motive to see him dead. Pamela recently quit the firm because Jon wouldn’t confirm her salary; Zach was pushing for a merger with rival Miles (Colin Price) that Jon was unsure about, and the dead man fretted that Amy was a gold digger, so Jon wouldn’t support her promotion, either.

Adding to the too plentiful number of suspects is Malorie’s ex-husband Ryan (Frank Fiola), a recovering addict. Even Jon’s own daughter ends up on the list when it’s revealed that they were fighting in the weeks leading up to his death.

The only one who doesn’t have a motive to kill Jon is Malorie’s best friend Francesca (JaNae Armogan), who works at the wedding venue and thinks she saw something fishy. Naturally she’s killed off before the end of the first act.

What follows is a lot of conversation between characters about the firm, the merger, Malorie and Jon’s relationship, and how everyone is lying to everyone else. The problem is that 90% of these conversations happen via phone or text and few of them are interesting. Marie’s script fails to develop the characters beyond their motive, which means that the majority of the plot developments aren’t particularly engaging because the characters are so shallow.

With so many people and interweaving relationships involved, it’s hard to zero in and identify with anyone. Malorie is clearly meant to be the protagonist because, like most Lifetime films, she assumes the role of investigator, despite the presence of Detective Levine (Christian Paul) on the periphery.

But even she is kept at a distance from the audience. Because we only see a few moments of her relationship with Jon, secrets that the pair were keeping from friends and family don’t carry any emotional resonance when they come to light later in the film. One in  particular seems to come out of left field and seemingly only exists to introduce another red herring in order to prolong the mystery for another 20 minutes.

Alas none of the characters get much to do, so none of the performances pop. Kopacek and Callahan look too similar and are styled identically, which sometimes makes it hard to distinguish one from the other. Further issues with casting is that the age disparity between Malorie & Jon and Zach & Amy is never mentioned (neither is Jon’s paternity of Bridget). This may be an ageist observation, but even the fact that Pamela never comments that her daughter was marrying her (Pamela’s) boss seems unusual, especially when Death Down the Aisle regularly suggests that one or more character is a gold digger.

Arguably the film’s biggest issue is that everything circles around the business dealings of the firm, none of which is engaging or interesting (hilariously it’s never even made clear what kind of law they practice!) Without more distinct characters, there’s very little to hang the narrative on.

Unfortunately after a solid opening, Death Down the Aisle gets stuck spinning its wheels, endlessly recycling its red herrings and interminable phone calls between characters. The suspect list is long, but the film’s energy lags through the saggy middle section and the climax can’t bring Death Down the Aisle back to life.

This one could have easily been called “Business Phone Calls”…and that’s not great.

Death Down the Aisle premiered on Lifetime Thursday, June 13.

2 skulls out of 5

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