USA TODAY International Edition

‘Hereditary’ will turn horror flick fans inside out

Horror flick turns tropes — and viewers — inside out

- Patrick Ryan

The scariest movie in years remixes every nightmare into one relentless, dread-inducing drama.

NEW YORK – Imagine every nightmare you’ve ever had was remixed into one unrelentin­g, dread-inducing horror movie. ❚ The result might look something like Hereditary (in theaters Friday), the dark family drama disguised as fright flick that united Sundance Film Festival-goers in collective screams when it premiered in January. ❚ Widely considered by critics to be one of the scariest movies ever, it’s the rare horror outing to earn rave reviews (93% positive on Rotten Tomatoes) and awards attention for actress Toni Collette, returning to the genre nearly two decades after her Oscarnomin­ated turn in The Sixth Sense (1999).

“This film lends itself to the communal theatrical experience,” says Collette, who recently saw it with an audience for the first time. “There’s a safety-in-numbers aspect, but also just the palpable energy of people losing their (expletive). It’s really funny to observe.”

But what exactly makes Hereditary so utterly terrifying?

The story begins, as many horror films do, with a death: Unhinged artist Annie Graham (Collette) has just lost her estranged mother, whom she learns had secret friends and engaged in Satanic rituals in her final years. The Grahams — concerned husband Steve (Gabriel Byrne), standoffis­h son Peter (Alex Wolff) and disturbed daughter Charlie (Milly Shapiro) — grieve in their own unique ways, until another devastatin­g blow unleashes an ancestral curse that rips the family apart.

Taking cues from Rosemary’s Baby and Don’t Look Now, the movie throws tried-and-true horror ingredient­s into a hellish blender. The goal, according to first-time filmmakerA­ri Aster, was to “upset people on a deep level” with scares they think they already know.

Horror fans “come in with expectatio­ns; they know the tropes and convention­s,” says Aster, who was inspired to write Hereditary after years of trying to get a movie financed. “A lot of the setup here is designed to be familiar, but then things happen that I hope jolt you out of complacenc­y and

encourage a more active emotional engagement. That’s the fun of working in (this) genre: How can you honor (tradition), but then be totally irreverent?”

Hereditary taps into existentia­l fears of dying and abandonmen­t as Annie slowly loses her mind. She recreates traumatic scenes from her life using miniatures and dollhouses, and befriends a woman (Ann Dowd) who communicat­es with the dead.

Collette, 45, found it easy to sympathize with Annie.

“There are so many despicable moments when she seems so unlikable and self-absorbed, and isn’t a very good mother,” Collette says. But in the end, “she’s so repressed and so protective of her family. She’s lived with this (curse) her whole life — this knowledge that something is definitely wrong — and can’t understand what it is. It’s total torture.”

The actress left her two kids and musician husband Dave Galafassi at home in Los Angeles when she shot the film in Utah last year.

“Upon reading (Hereditary), I knew it would demand even more of me and I needed to take care of myself. I just found a way of shaking it off day by day, rather than letting it accumulate and explode at the end of the job.”

Adds Aster: “There are some scenes when you’re just howling in anguish, but you’d stroll in like, ‘Hey, guys! What’d you have for breakfast?’ ”

 ??  ?? A24
A24
 ??  ?? Collette plays Annie, mom to troubled Charlie (Milly Shapiro).
Collette plays Annie, mom to troubled Charlie (Milly Shapiro).
 ??  ?? “An actor dreams of having a part like this,” Toni Collette says. PHOTOS BY A24
“An actor dreams of having a part like this,” Toni Collette says. PHOTOS BY A24

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