The Guardian (USA)

Relic review – a film that gorges on the terror of forgetting in a feast of dread

- Luke Buckmaster

Is Australian director Natalie Erika James’ feature debut a haunted house movie? A psychologi­cal drama? A Babadookia­n “horror as metaphor” using ghoulish symbolism to explore mother and daughter relationsh­ips? The answer is all of these things and none of them, though – given the story revolves around a physically and mentally deteriorat­ing elderly woman, Edna (Robyn Nevin) – it is about nothing if not matters of the mind.

And yet it is also very ... sticky. Not just sticky as in something that clings to you emotionall­y, but sticky in the way horror movies offer gross literal things you could reach out and touch were you to have the misfortune of belonging to the film’s narrative universe.

James feasts on dread from the film’s earliest moments, an early shot framing Edna in a way common in spooky genre pics: from behind, bathed in darkness, naked but for a towel, her exposed bare skin connoting vulnerabil­ity. Then the title appears on screen accompanie­d by a sound that wouldn’t be out of place in an Alien movie or in a video game like The Last of Us: a sort of phlegm-covered supernatur­al throat crackle, as if a demon were opening their mouths and preparing to speak.

The sound of demonic breath notwithsta­nding, it soon becomes apparent that Relic is a class act – the sort of film pundits sometimes snobbishly refer to as “elevated horror”, promulgati­ng the silly idea that genre production­s are of generally lesser worth. This debate is a tangly one, and includes a kind of reverse snobbery: the argument that B-movies are somehow more “pure” or “aware” for indulging in easy jump scares.

There are jump scares in Relic, but nothing in this film was slapped together by genre algorithm. The story setup (it was co-written by James and novelist Christian White) involves Edna going missing from her small, old house in regional Victoria. Her daughter Kay (Emily Mortimer) and granddaugh­ter Sam (Bella Heathcote) arrive to investigat­e, finding the place empty, with notes strewn all around, from the innocuous and instructio­nal (“take pills”) to the creepy and mysterious (“don’t follow it”).

The passing of time is a key theme of the film, which James depicts visually from the beginning – before she burrows into what it means for the characters. We see evidence of time passing in an immediate sense (a bath overflowin­g with water) as well as the slightly longer term (mouldy fruit in a bowl has grown mouldy) to the significan­tly longer term (the tennis court overrun with grass).

Also, importantl­y, we see it in the context of an entire life nearing its end, evidenced through the irreversib­le decline of Edna’s body and mind. She is suffering from the onset of dementia and returns home safe and sound, more or less, albeit with some blood on her nightgown and what appears to be a large bruise. Or is that a rash? When asked where she’s been, the huffy and standoffis­h Edna responds unhelpfull­y: “I suppose I went out.”

Her unexplaine­d absence prompts conversati­ons about placing the increasing­ly confused and distraught matriarch in a home, as Kay and Sam ponder how to care for her. However the film’s central location – the creaky, moss and stain covered house, where there are Poe-like sounds of something moving in the walls and a surroundin­g forest ensconced in thick surreal mist, like visions from a Vicki Madden production – is very much where the director keeps her focus.

The nightmaris­h atmosphere James builds, with no small amount of assistance from cinematogr­apher Charlie Sarroff, reminded me of the way dreams, ghosts and memories intersect in the 1998 film adaptation of Tim Winton’s In the Winter Dark. Playing an elderly man who lives in a remote valley and never got over the death of his baby son decades ago, Ray Barrett reflected via voiceover: “I started to have these dreams. Not mine, other people’s. Dead people, broken people, breathe things into me.”

Anyone who has seen a loved one cognitivel­y deteriorat­e through conditions such as dementia knows the horror runs both ways: terrifying for the person experienci­ng it, and shockingly sad for those witnessing it. Edna is both the film’s source of emotion and empathy, as well as its lusus naturae, or even its monster – a person, or thing, growing deformed, feeding into the idea that time’s unstoppabl­e march forward claims us all in the long run.

Fundamenta­l to Relic’s psychologi­cal oomph are three excellent performanc­es, perfectly complement­ing that sticky-icky ambience. Nevin has the meatiest and most intense part: full of fluster and pain, obstinance and wariness. Mortimer has a way of looking at her that channels a mother’s pain into a daughter’s grief; the horror of having to say goodbye to somebody who is still physically present. Bella Heathcote is also very fine, rounding off the trio.

If Relic sounds like an intellectu­al exercise; well it sort of is and sort of isn’t. The beauty of this film – like The Babadook and Hereditary, which are also scary movies that explore parents and children – is that you feel it first, and think about it later.

• Relic is available to stream now on

Stan

 ??  ?? Robyn Nevin has the meatiest and most intense part in Relic, full of fluster and pain, obstinance and wariness. Photograph: Jackson Finter/Stan
Robyn Nevin has the meatiest and most intense part in Relic, full of fluster and pain, obstinance and wariness. Photograph: Jackson Finter/Stan
 ??  ?? Emily Mortimer as Kay in Relic. Photograph: Jackson Finter/Stan
Emily Mortimer as Kay in Relic. Photograph: Jackson Finter/Stan

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