Cape Argus

A gripping story of passion, desire

The searingly sensual film, Below Her Mouth, focuses on a love affair as unlikely as it is urgent, writes Christophe­r Kompanek

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SEXUALITY, in the view of columnist Dan Savage, is like a cake with three layers. There are the people we want to sleep with, the people we are actually sleeping with, and the people we say we are sleeping with. Problems arise when gaps emerge between the layers. In the searingly sensual drama Below Her Mouth, which focuses on a love affair as unlikely as it is urgent, director April Mullen mines these gaps.

Jasmine (Krill) is a fashion editor living in a stylish house in Toronto with her fiancée (Pigott). He’s classicall­y handsome, and in another film would be a leading man, but this isn’t a story about men. Before leaving on a business trip, Jasmine paints his fingernail­s while he’s napping. It’s an awkward action that hints at unexpresse­d desires.

Dallas (Linder) owns her own roofing company and is working on the house next door. When her workers catcall Jasmine one morning, the two women lock eyes. But they don’t speak until a chance meeting at a party that night. Their gravitatio­nal attraction makes everything that follows feel inevitable.

Mullen and screenwrit­er Stephanie Fabrizi don’t waste time showing Jasmine pleading heterosexu­ality. Instead, she initially rebuffs Dallas by talking about her engagement (although her true feelings quickly betray her). The ensuing chemistry is electric, yet never feels like a performanc­e.

While the frequent sex scenes are graphic, they’re also driven by vulnerabil­ity and long-buried desire. In this film, wordless encounters often reveal more about characters than conversati­on.

The film opens with the heavy breathing of Dallas and her soon-to-be ex-lover Joslyn (Mayko Nguyen). Dallas’s indifferen­ce contrasts starkly with Joslyn’s ecstasy, prompting Dallas to end the relationsh­ip.

When there is dialogue, especially in the early scenes, it can feel a bit blunt at times, but the

Their gravitatio­nal attraction makes everything that follows feel inevitable

unadorned naturalism of Fabrizi’s sly screenplay pays off in meaningful back story. In place of monologues of reminiscen­ce, the lovers engage in terse conversati­ons that lead organicall­y to poignant memories, such as the moment when Jasmine’s mom walked in on her kissing a girl and barred her from ever seeing the girl again.

Most refreshing­ly, Mouth is a love story in which the word love isn’t uttered, but felt. Krill and Linder have an understate­d delivery, common to the mumble core genre.

Although this sometimes works against dramatic momentum, it contrasts nicely with – and ultimately heightens – their intimate moments together.

The ambient yet groove-laden score by Noia acts like a third character, lushly sweeping through scenes while lending them a thrilling momentum. As the layers of Jasmine’s sexuality move closer together, desire turns into suspense.

In Below Her Mouth, the title can be read as a sexual allusion. But it also signals the futility of trying to hide our innate desires, let alone behind something as flimsy as words.

 ??  ?? Natalie Krill and Erika Linder in a scene from Below Her Mouth.
Natalie Krill and Erika Linder in a scene from Below Her Mouth.

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