Los Angeles Times

One of the year’s best horror films

- By Katie Walsh Walsh is a Tribune News Service film critic.

Back in 2007, Quentin Tarantino and Robert Rodriguez tapped an up-andcoming genre filmmaker, Edgar Wright, to make a parody trailer for a fake movie to play between their “Grindhouse” double feature. Wright came up with “Don’t,” in which a gravelly voice intones, “If you are thinking of going into this house — don’t! If you are thinking of opening this door — don’t! If you are thinking of checking out the basement — don’t!” It was funny because it was deeply recognizab­le, and it tapped into the audience’s urge to yell at the screen, “Don’t go in there!”

This is also essentiall­y the plot of Zach Cregger’s “Barbarian,” about which the less one knows, the better. In fact, consider this permission to stop reading this review right now and just buy tickets. Do not watch trailers, do not read reviews, proceed directly to the theater for one of the most brilliantl­y executed, sharply incisive and wildly scary horror films of the year.

How can one describe “Barbarian” without giving away all the best twists and turns? Well, it’s a triumph of what could be a new subgenre: Airbnb horror. It starts on a dark and rainy night as a young woman named Tess (Georgina Campbell) attempts to access a lockbox at the Detroit rental home she’s booked for a job interview the next day. A light inside f licks on. Someone else is home.

In a plot twist that demonstrat­es the perils of farming out property management to anonymous tech companies, it turns out that the house has been doublebook­ed, and Keith (Bill Skarsgård) has already taken up residence. Despite her best instincts — like most modern, independen­t women, Tess is highly vigilant — she’s out of options, and she decides to crash with him in the house while things get sorted.

This is the first horror film for Cregger, who is one of the founding members of the sketch comedy troupe the Whitest Kids U’Know, but it’s clear he is a fan, and a stuinto dent, of the genre, and in his masterful control of tone and terror, an exciting new horror filmmaker on the rise. He demonstrat­es a knack for flipping expectatio­ns, so he gives us a horror heroine who is smarter than the average scream queen, and he gives us a mysterious loner (who previously played a famed horror monster in “It”), who just might actually be a nice guy.

Throughout the film, the process of establishi­ng and upending expectatio­ns happens again and again. Cregger slowly builds bone-chilling and suspensefu­l sequences to screeching­ly operatic moments of face-melting horror, then swiftly cuts to a different chapter, making a hard left a completely different mode, taking us all on the roller-coaster ride. His facility with comedy also aids in these jarring tone switches, and “Barbarian” is as funny as it is terrifying.

Tess and Keith fumble through the awkwardnes­s of their Airbnb mix-up, but the film widens its scope to encompass the house’s other occupants and owners over decades. Cregger traces the suburban home’s journey through time, the middleclas­s neighborho­od succumbing to white flight and later abandonmen­t, finally snapped up as a cheap flip for the short-term rental market. The rumors about what happens in this home are known by locals only, underlinin­g the perils of an eroded community, ravaged by exploitati­ve capitalism, and creating the perfect anonymous environmen­t to lure clueless, tech-savvy millennial­s to their doom.

Cregger also uses “Barbarian” to explore women as victims, villains and victors within the horror genre, and the ways in which they’re both endangered and empowered by empathy. The deeply caring Tess is a perfect victim, but she’s also street-smart, and her soft skills and ability to read others are the most effective powers for fighting the evil she encounters. Campbell’s performanc­e is perfectly calibrated, and Cregger effectivel­y illustrate­s that it’s Tess’ emotional intelligen­ce that gives her a fighting chance.

Cregger wraps this multilayer­ed contempora­ry social commentary in a rip-roaring, utterly horrifying flick that’s inspired by classic horror filmmaking and tropes. It’s the throwback appeal coupled with fresh ideas — and plenty of skull-rattling scares — that makes this such an exciting new film and one of the must-see horror movies of the year.

 ?? 20th Century Studios ?? AN AIRBNB stay doesn’t turn out as planned in Zach Cregger’s “Barbarian,” with Georgina Campbell.
20th Century Studios AN AIRBNB stay doesn’t turn out as planned in Zach Cregger’s “Barbarian,” with Georgina Campbell.

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