The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Georgia’s rising star Zoe Renee in socially conscious film ‘Master’

Thriller draws on racism that director experience­d at Yale.

- By Felicia Feaster

In the new Amazon Studios psychologi­cal thriller “Master” from 28-year-old writer and director Mariama Diallo, horror becomes a powerful vehicle to express how centuries of racism have infected an elite Northeaste­rn college campus in ways both micro and macro.

“Master” continues a tradition establishe­d with Jordan Peele’s groundbrea­king 2017 psychologi­cal horror film “Get Out,” which also used the horror genre to intensify the sense of isolation and terror a Black photograph­er (Daniel Kaluuya) begins to feel while staying at his white girlfriend’s remote upstate New York family home.

Rising star Zoe Renee, raised in Fayettevil­le, Georgia, brings a complex blend of vulnerabil­ity and defiance to her starring role as Jasmine Moore, a freshman who is one of just eight Black students on the predominat­ely white Ancaster College campus that serves as the eerie set piece of “Master.”

Diallo’s tense collegiate thriller draws from the Senegalese-born director’s own rich cinematic vocabulary as well as her experience­s of racism while an undergradu­ate at another esteemed, history-laden institutio­n, Yale. A disturbing frat party that turns in an instant from jovial to menacing was drawn, says Renee, from an incident in Diallo’s own time at Yale.

Adding to Jasmine’s sense of otherness on a campus whose white students seem to have all summered and schooled together is a disturbing school legend that a 17th-century witch haunts the campus and has driven other students to violent ends.

Diallo, a film studies major at Yale, prepared her cast for the experience of shooting “Master” with a crash course in psychologi­cal horror. Even before production began, there were screenings of “Get Out,” the Swedish horror fantasy “Let the Right One In,” Stanley Kubrick’s marriage of horror and domestic violence in 1980’s “The Shining” and Roman Polanski’s “Rosemary’s Baby.” Like the Mia Farrow character, who gets a Vidal Sassoon short crop in that 1968 pregnancy horror classic, Jasmine even has a radical change of hairstyle as the story progresses, to signal her emotional distress.

“Mariama is a film buff through and through,” says Renee. “She loves film and is so educated in the subject, and I think she wanted our entire cast to explore the wide range of horror and what we were about to dive into.”

“She wanted us to be really comfortabl­e. We spoke on Zoom pretty much every day over breakfast and talked and walked through what Jasmine’s thought process would be.”

“And, you know, because of that preparatio­n, we were all able to go on to the first day of set feeling so good and ready.”

Regina Hall stars along- side Renee as professor Gail Bishop, the new Ancaster “master” who is charged with both teaching and mentoring the incoming freshman class. Gail also takes a personal interest in Jasmine’s growing isolation as dark supernatur­al forces and a foreboding sense of racial violence haunt her.

Diving into the world of “Master” where Gail and Jasmine are both outsiders on a campus where whiteness is the norm only reminded Renee of how unique her Atlanta upbringing has been.

Raised in a city with a proud civil rights history, black leadership, creative class and HBCUS that offer inclusion instead of isolation, Renee had to ponder how alienating an experience like Ancaster might be for a student who doesn’t fit the WASP-Y mold.

Renee got a taste for the value of HBCUS when she worked on the 2017 BET TV series “The Quad,” filmed on the Morehouse campus, about students attending the fictional Georgia A&M.

“It made me think of the importance of HBCUS. You know, it always feels great being in a place where you do not feel isolated, you don’t feel other. And I think the beauty of HBCUS and life on campus there is that there are so many people that reflect who you are and encourage the parts of you that are the most honest.”

 ?? AMAZON CONTENT SERVICES LLC ?? Zoe Renee, raised in Fayettevil­le, brings a complex blend of vulnerabil­ity and defiance to her starring role in “Master.”
AMAZON CONTENT SERVICES LLC Zoe Renee, raised in Fayettevil­le, brings a complex blend of vulnerabil­ity and defiance to her starring role in “Master.”

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