The Denver Post

An accidental killing in a pot-induced haze

“Woodshock” is light on story and heavy on mood

- By Alan Zilberman A24

★★¼5 Rated R. 100 minutes.

For most of “Woodshock,” the feelings of its heroine remain obscure. Whether at a party or at home, where she seems to be in a haze, it’s as if she’s lost in her own thoughts. Drugs could be one explanatio­n — she works at a marijuana dispensary — yet there’s a needling sense of something more tragic, more sinister.

The debut of writer-directors Kate and Laura Mulleavy, sisters who work as fashion designers, has all the hallmarks of a first film, including one too many experiment­al flourishes. Defiantly inscrutabl­e, “Woodshock” can test a viewer’s patience, yet the filmmakers’ consistent self-confidence

Ecreates an alluring, oddly hypnotic effect.

When we first meet Theresa (Kirsten Dunst), she’s sharing a bed with her ailing mother (Susan Traylor). Their whispered conversati­on is terse, with a subtext that Theresa is about to assist in her mother’s suicide, with a joint of poison-laced marijuana. Theresa is too withdrawn to grieve normally, to the chagrin of her husband (Joe Cole). She returns to work at the dispensary,

Ewhere her boss, Keith (Pilou Asbaek), tries to cheer her up. They need all the good spirits they can get, since their most loyal customer (Steph DuVall) is also terminally ill.

As for plot, an accidental killing and its aftermath — seen from Theresa’s point of view — are at the center of “Woodshock.” Dunst is in practicall­y every scene, and her focus is so inward that all supporting characters eventually lose patience with her. Although her performanc­e doesn’t generate much sympathy, it is at the same time magnetic: During one long stretch, Theresa wanders her home, inspecting her fridge and mulling whether to take a shower. Is she debating her own suicide? So high that she finds the notion of creature comforts far out?

Dunst never fully reveals Theresa, with the film building an understate­d tone of curiosity about what she’ll do next. It could be anything.

Throughout “Woodshock,” the Mulleavy sisters return, again and again, to strange, evocative imagery. There are many shots of Dunst communing with centuries-old sequoia trees, their age and gargantuan size metaphoric­ally dwarfing Theresa’s relatively trivial problems.

The camera often distorts the actress’s face, via reflection or neon lighting, in a muted way that evokes the feeling of being high. There is a point to these apparent gimmicks: We never get a complete understand­ing of Theresa’s behavior, because she doesn’t have one, either, thanks to a fluctuatin­g mental state.

If it sounds like n hallucinat­ory, depressing slog, two important things elevate “Woodshock.” The first is the performanc­e of Asbaek, a veteran of Danish cinema and television who made a strong impression as Euron Greyjoy on “Game of Thrones.” His performanc­e as Keith is relatively muted and compassion­ate, yet there’s a devilish charm to the character. He’s the sort of person who inflates himself, not from an excess of ego, but as a way to combat boredom. Then there’s composer Peter Raeburn’s lush, haunting score, which doesn’t so much comment on or embellish the story as create ambiance. Ultimately, it makes us more receptive to a film that’s light on story and heavy on mood.

It would be easy to write off “Woodshock” as pretentiou­s — weirdness for the sake of weirdness. But there’s something universal about Theresa, vs., say, the stoned high jinks of Cheech and Chong. Introspect­ive and withdrawn, she uses marijuana as both catalyst and salve.

Even as the film warns against persistent, clouded judgment, it is no criticism of casual drug use. Sustained, chemically induced bliss can be a blessing, “Woodshock” suggests, even up to the point at which the fog is the only thing left to see.

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