National Post

Why watching Blood Honey is like living on Venus

- Chris Knight Blood Honey opens Sept. 1 in Toronto, Sept. 8 in Vancouver, and Sept. 12 in Calgary.

Pardon the astronomic­al metaphor, but watching a movie that has no atmosphere is like living on Mars. Blood Honey, from Canadian director Jeff Kopas, sometimes seems to be nothing but atmosphere; it’s like living on Venus.

The opening scene sets the tone as well as the story; when Jenibel was a little girl, she watched her mother commit suicide, plunging to her death from a water tower behind the family’s rural Ontario hunting lodge.

Years l ater, t he nowgrown Jenibel ( Shenae Grimes- Beech) has spent years away from the place, but she’s back to try to make amends with her f ather, Marvin ( Gil Bellows), dying of some obscure disease.

Jenibel quickly reconnects with an oddball assortment of Northern Gothic types, including her brother ( Kenneth Mitchell) and the local doctor (Don McKellar), all of whom seem to enjoy swilling mason j ars f ull of locally produced honey wine. ( The film was originally titled The Hive, which is also Marvin’s pet name for the lodge.)

Je ni bel s uff er s f r om waking dreams that lend the film an air of horror, while everyone else has a habit of going silent in mid-conversati­on, with every scene punctuated by a too- on- the- nose score from Amin Bhatia. (I’ve heard Interstell­ar Suite, Amin; you can do better!) It culminates in one of those a-ha! climaxes that is meant to make you question everything you’ve seen thus far, though it may just leave you scratching your head.

Kopas’s last film, 2011’s An Insignific­ant Harvey, suffered from some unfortunat­e similariti­es to a superior movie called The Station Agent. Blood Honey, while original and even audacious in its plotting, feels a little too generic in style to be memorable. Somewhere in this filmmaker’s wheelhouse is a Goldilocks- zone film, but I’m still waiting to see it.

½

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