A woman's psyche is explored as she is pushed beyond the limits of sanity.A woman's psyche is explored as she is pushed beyond the limits of sanity.A woman's psyche is explored as she is pushed beyond the limits of sanity.
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It's cold - I don't know why but I can feel it, probably something in the light, or is it the way she's breathing, or the tension in her posture as she rams the shovel into the earth? A few quick cuts, accompanied by a throbbing heartbeat and ticking clock, all evocative of dissociation, take her from her garden into a room twinkling with Christmas lights. There's a voice: "Mum, what are you doing?" Now she's dancing to hard rock. She's wearing a white shirt splattered with blood and there's blood on the walls too, she's laughing maniacally, beside herself, she's wearing a Christmas wreath as a Dionysian crown. We see the world as she sees it, spinning, chaotic, an agony of confusion. She collapses at the foot of the stairs and the camera glimpses her from above, down the stairwell. The stairwell, like a spiralled portal, momentarily sucks us out of the protagonist's point of view - into someone else's, because she's not alone. There's a boy.
She's staring into the washing machine, washing the bloodied shirt, as if in the washing machine she were searching for an answer, or a way out. Then, "Boo!" The boy pops up behind her and she turns in shock and he's gone. There's also a teddybear, now above the cabinet in the bathroom, now on a pebble beach at the foot of a chalky white cliff, this time oozing blood from its chest, and again in the boy's hands when he's suddenly next to her in the car - parked at the top of the cliff - speaking to her. The boy's voice is an otherworldly, hollow echo: "it was just an accident, Mum."
A shovel, a bloodied shirt, a cliff, a teddybear oozing blood, an "accident" - as the film progresses, it's up to us to join the dots.
But of course the boy is not really outside her, but a part of her, and we're with Mum all the way. When we watch her, we are her watching herself. Keep Mum is a film about dissociation, projection, the frenzied oscillation of memories, images and sensations that swarm the trauma-afflicted psyche. With these comes also a cocktail of emotions: ecstasy, fear, guilt and grief - with its various "stages," but most prominently denial and bargaining, as she tries to piece together, while struggling to hold herself together, what she did the night before and before that.
She's staring into the washing machine, washing the bloodied shirt, as if in the washing machine she were searching for an answer, or a way out. Then, "Boo!" The boy pops up behind her and she turns in shock and he's gone. There's also a teddybear, now above the cabinet in the bathroom, now on a pebble beach at the foot of a chalky white cliff, this time oozing blood from its chest, and again in the boy's hands when he's suddenly next to her in the car - parked at the top of the cliff - speaking to her. The boy's voice is an otherworldly, hollow echo: "it was just an accident, Mum."
A shovel, a bloodied shirt, a cliff, a teddybear oozing blood, an "accident" - as the film progresses, it's up to us to join the dots.
But of course the boy is not really outside her, but a part of her, and we're with Mum all the way. When we watch her, we are her watching herself. Keep Mum is a film about dissociation, projection, the frenzied oscillation of memories, images and sensations that swarm the trauma-afflicted psyche. With these comes also a cocktail of emotions: ecstasy, fear, guilt and grief - with its various "stages," but most prominently denial and bargaining, as she tries to piece together, while struggling to hold herself together, what she did the night before and before that.
Luana Di Pasquale's 'Keep Mum' is the kind of film that never stops erupting. No matter how many times you watch it, it will always scorch your heart. And when you reach the film's anguished end, your chest wound won't be healed, but Di Pasquale will have certainly cauterised it.
'Keep Mum' is a blisteringly intense volcano of a film, and for good reason. It charts the first 24 hours after a wife & mother escapes her abusive partner. The title role is played by Nadira Murray, flawlessly cast and phenomenally gifted. Most Hollywood films would end their films where 'Keep Mum' begins - at the moment of triumph over the horrors of domestic violence. But 'Keep Mum' has so much more to say, because there is much, much more to say. The horror hasn't stopped. The regret hasn't stopped. And the guilt hasn't stopped.
Visually, 'Keep Mum' is one of the most beautiful films to come out of 2019. This is an unbelievable achievement given the film's budget, and all credit must go to Luana Di Pasquale as writer/director, Martine Wolff as director of photography, and Massimiliano Guelfi as editor. The story-telling on screen here is inevitably a sensation, thanks not only to this trio, but also to an extremely talented crew working seamlessly together. The music, the visuals, the emotion, the tension, are all incredible. And Di Pasquale beautifully balances the non-linear arc with a clear narrative (which is not at all as easy as sounds, as the current debate surrounding 2020's 'Tenet' has shown).
A film such as this would be nothing without its main character, and Nadira Murray carries the film with such intensity, it's as if you're watching a crucifixion. Her rage can be subtle, her silence can be agony, and her grief can be very real indeed. You never tire of watching Murray's performance; you only wish you could do more to help her. A special mention must also go to Cameron Murray, Nadira's on-screen (and off-screen) son. A talented actor in his own right, his scenes are affectionate, unnerving and poignant; and his performance is a vital piece in comprehending the entirety of his mother's actions.
'Keep Mum' is an unforgettable film about a forgotten horror. And that horror can be hiding behind any curtain on any street. Di Pasquale and Murray have lifted that heavy curtain; they have opened that dark door. And having stepped in, you will witness a horror classic.
@MarioDhingsa, SilverScreenBlack
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Written by Walking After U
Performed by Walking After U
Courtesy of Radio Star
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