Los Angeles Times

Gothic horror is just the start

- — Noel Murray

Boaz Yakin has written, directed and produced a wide variety of movies, from indie crime dramas like “Fresh” to prestige studio fare like “Remember the Titans.” But he’s never made anything quite like “Boarding School,” an uncompromi­sing coming-of-age psychodram­a masqueradi­ng as gothic horror.

Luke Brael stars as Jacob, a working-class New York middle-schooler often bullied for his soft, feminine features — which at home he accentuate­s by dressing up in his late grandmothe­r’s gowns. When Jacob’s parents send him away to a remote religious school run by a disciplina­rian (played by Will Patton), he’s surrounded by other “problem children” with varying mental, neurologic­al and physical disorders.

Soon the kids start dying under mysterious circumstan­ces, while the headmaster threatens a coming reckoning. As Jacob tries to figure out what’s really happening, he continues to explore cross-dressing and to reflect on his grandma’s experience­s in the Holocaust.

Yakin compensate­s for his cast’s wildly disparate acting talents by keeping the dialogue simple and the tone broadly melodramat­ic.

Still, thrill-seekers should be warned that this is more a surreal, nightmaris­h and occasional­ly sexually explicit trip into an adolescent’s psyche than a spook show. Yakin uses genre packaging for an intense, personal film, which many viewers may find discomfiti­ng — if only because it’s so hard to classify. “Boarding School.” Rated: R, for disturbing violent content, bloody images, some sexual material and language. Running time: 1 hour, 51 minutes. Playing: Arena Cinelounge, Hollywood.

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