Marin Independent Journal

A moody and unsettling dream in ‘Come True’

- By Lindsey Bahr

The murky and illogical territory of dreams and nightmares has always provided fertile ground for filmmakers. Not only can your imaginatio­n run wild on screen, but there’s even less of an expectatio­n that it make any sense in the end. How could a creative soul resist?

In “Come True,” a lofi indie from director Anthony Scott Burns, the nightmare is always the same for a runaway teen, Sarah (Julia Sarah Stone), who sleeps on a playground slide and guzzles coffee to stay awake as long as she can. When you see the muscular, shadowy figure with the glowing eyes that looms in her dreams, you’ll start to understand why she has a perpetuall­y haunted and twitchy demeanor. Sleep is not peace for Sarah and she’s starting to crack.

So when she spots a flyer at the local coffee shop for a university sleep study that pays, she heads right there. It seems like business as usual, with a peppy research assistant and a few repeat subjects coming back for more monitored sleep. But she soon discovers that it’s a little more experiment­al than she thought and possibly even sinister. They’re not just studying sleep. They’re mapping the dreams. Cue the “Inception” music.

With David Cronenberg overtones, “Come True” is a slow-burn experience that also feels very independen­t. The cast is scarcely recognizab­le and it was made with a slim crew. Burns not only wrote and directed, but also shot the film and helped compose

the moody, synth-y score. It’s why it feels so much like a singular vision, which in this case has pros and cons. The film is a striking exercise in tone and builds to a few terrific crescendos that will surely leave viewers with some goosebumps. He’s not an impatient filmmaker and the steady hand pays off. Burns has an affinity for deserted hallways, nighttime vistas and distorted video screens. Stone, too, is excellent in a difficult and taxing role. She fills the frame with nervous and vulnerable energy.

The story itself and the dialogue leave something to be desired, however. It’s a smart film, certainly, but maybe not as smart as it wants to be. And there are a couple of clunkers that bring the mostly meditative experience to a halt.

Then there’s a subplot with a researcher (Landon Liboiron) who develops a crush on his teenage subject that just feels far too icky for a modern movie. That she is technicall­y 18 does not make it better. The end, too, is oddly specific and gimmicky for a film that has thus far basked in its own vagueness. And it might leave you incredulou­sly asking “what” a la Oprah during the Meghan and Harry interview.

But for as frustratin­g as it sometimes is, “Come True” is hard to resist, not unlike a dream itself.

 ?? IFC FILMS VIA AP ?? Julia Sarah Stone stars in “Come True,” a film by Anthony Scott Burns.
IFC FILMS VIA AP Julia Sarah Stone stars in “Come True,” a film by Anthony Scott Burns.

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