Ottawa Citizen

JLaw rides the horror roller-coaster

- JILL LAWLESS

Director Darren Aronofsky says his film Mother! — a delirious nightmare starring Jennifer Lawrence — is a “rollercoas­ter ride.”

Fittingly, it thrilled some viewers at the Venice Film Festival and left others a bit queasy.

A horror story that travels from menace to mind-bending mayhem, the movie was greeted with a mix of applause and boos from journalist­s this week at the Italian festival, where it’s one of 21 movies competing for the Golden Lion prize.

Lawrence and Javier Bardem play a couple — identified only as Mother and Him — living in that horror-flick staple, an isolated old house. He’s a poet with writer’s block, while she devotes herself to restoring the house after a devastatin­g fire.

Mysterious house guests, played by Ed Harris and Michelle Pfeiffer, trigger unsettling events that get progressiv­ely weirder.

Aronofsky, who won the Golden Lion in 2008 for The Wrestler, acknowledg­ed the movie was “a very, very strong cocktail.”

“Of course there are going to be people who are not going to want that type of an experience. And that’s fine,” he told reporters.

“I’ve been making it clear that this is a roller-coaster ride: Only come on it if you are really prepared to do the loop-the-loop a few times.”

Some critics were impressed by what a review in The Hollywood Reporter called the “madhouse bacchanal” of the film’s final stretch. Others wondered what it all meant. Variety found it impressive but empty, a “baroque nightmare that’s about nothing but itself.”

Aronofsky said the point of the film “is that it’s a mystery.”

“It’s constantly surprising the audience,” he said. “You don’t know where it’s going to go. And we didn’t want to make the audience ever feel safe, because (Lawrence’s) character in the movie never feels safe.”

It’s easy to see an environmen­tal allegory in the film, about a house that is invaded, besieged, flooded and set on fire.

Aronofsky said the movie is his “howl to the moon,” provoked by anguish at the state of society and particular­ly the environmen­t.

Viewers expecting naturalism should probably stay home. Aronofsky said the film is an allegory. The movie’s initial working title was Day Six — the day in the book of Genesis on which God created humanity and gave it dominion over the Earth.

That makes the characters as much archetypes as people — a challenge for the cast. Lawrence, who has portrayed a string of strong women, here plays a meek helpmeet who seems destined to suffer.

“It was a completely different character from anything I’ve ever done before, but it was also a different side of myself that I wasn’t in touch with and I didn’t really know, yet,” said Lawrence, who is in a real-life relationsh­ip with Aronofsky. “There is a part of me that (Aronofsky) really helped me get in touch with.

“It was difficult. It was the most I’ve ever had to pull out of myself,” she said.

Like Aronofsky’s ballet movie Black Swan, the film depicts creative artists as in some ways monstrous, using and consuming those around them.

Lawrence — who drew crowds of fans in Venice, as she does everywhere — said she tries in her life to “find the balance in myself ” between being accessible and protecting her private space.

She said the film spoke “to the insatiable need that we all have now, especially with the internet. We just want more and more and more.”

Though the movie is dark and disturbing, Aronofsky says he is an optimist about the fate of the planet.

“America is schizophre­nic,” he said. “We go from backing the Paris climate (accord) to eight months later pulling out.

“It’s tragic, but in many ways we have revealed who the enemy is and now we can attack it.”

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