Showing posts with label Blue Ruin. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Blue Ruin. Show all posts

Thursday, 4 August 2016

BLUE RUIN OST




Some of the best film scores don't dominate the soundtrack; instead they lurk in the background, building tension, atmosphere or whatever through subtle suggestion rather than blunt-force emotional manipulation. A perfect example of this is François-Eudes Chanfrault's icy, melancholy score for Inside, which listened to on its own can feel completely at odds with the carnage and mayhem that it accompanies on screen.

Brooke and Will Blair are also masters of the understated score. The duo's compositions for Jeremy Saulnier's Green Room and Blue Ruin are deceptively simple, but are in fact skillful exercises in balancing ethereal dreaminess with a deeply unsettling sense of creeping threat. Both scores are similar - a chilly ebb and flow of synth sounds, punctuated by passages of throbbing, pulsing menace. Like Carpenter, but without the beats. Some minimalist scores can be a bit of a chore to listen to on their own, but these are a pleasure, and as captivating as the two masterpieces that they were written for. You can stream the OST for Green Room elsewhere on this blog, but today just lose yourself in the Blair brother's score for Blue Ruin, courtesy of Blackest Rainbow Records' bandcamp page.

After six and a half years, today marks my 300th post. Most blogs seem to mark their progress in the thousands, but I have no idea how they do it. Fuck knows, it was hard enough for me just to reach this minor milestone. I actually recently considered throwing the towel in, but - like an antibiotic-resistant infection - I'm still here! Anyway, thanks to everyone reading this, and see you at post 500!?



Wednesday, 24 September 2014

BLUE RUIN




Jeremy Saulnier's debut feature Murder Party made an impression on me when I saw it a few years ago. I've still only seen it once, but I remember it as an oddball little indie horror flick with a sharp script, interesting characters and a mischievous anarchic streak. It's exactly the kind of rough around the edges, no-budget first effort that makes you sit up and take notice of a new director as being one to watch. 

Cut to seven years later and Saulnier's sophomore feature Blue Ruin. The leap in maturity and quality between the two movies is staggering. It's not just a case of an increase in production values due to a bigger budget, it's obvious that Saulnier has grown as a filmmaker in leaps and bounds. Honestly it feels like there should be a whole filmography dividing these two films (and in a way there is, as he served as DOP on no less than seven features in the interim).

Blue Ruin is my latest foray into a sub-genre that I love, albeit one that I don't really have a name for. Southern thrillers? It's a sub-genre that I can trace back to the Coen's Blood Simple, although I'm sure that movie has its antecedents that I'm not aware of. This year has been a notable one for movies in this vein with Jim Mickle's excellent Cold in July (the first of Mickle's movies that I've really connected with) and David Gordon Green's masterpiece Joe (seriously if you haven't seen Joe, drop what you're doing, and go watch it NOW). Both of those films deserve their own write-ups and I hope to get to that at some point.




The way that Blue Ruin's story unfolds in the first act relies heavily on visual storytelling to introduce you to its central character, Dwight. When we first meet him he's a homeless loner living out of his car, and it takes a while to understand how and why he arrived at this low point. One thing is obvious - his life has stalled, and he seems to be living in a kind of self imposed limbo. Then, out of the blue, something happens that wakes him out of this stupor and gives him purpose again. Something that propels him forward with such powerful determination that he seems unable to stop his forward momentum, even as things begin to spin out of control.

Honestly, that's as far as I want to go with a synopsis, because one of this film's pleasures is in the way that the story is gradually revealed. It's no spoiler to say that Blue Ruin is a revenge flick, as that's touted pretty heavily in the film's marketing, but one of the things that makes it stand out in the genre is that Dwight is no archetypal revenge protagonist/antihero. There's no macho posturing, no ninja-level weapons and martial arts skills, no quipping swagger to this character. This man is damaged, unconfident, introverted and constantly terrified. As such, you can't help but fall in love with and root for the character, especially given the terrible adversity he faces in the course of the story.

Right across the board there's so much to love in Blue Ruin. The actors are all excellent, feeding off of Saulnier's killer script, the standout being Macon Blair whose understated performance as Dwight brings so much to a character who is a man of few words. The film is beautifully shot in rural locations throughout Virginia and just drips with backwoods atmosphere. And finally, the sometimes languid pacing is often punctuated by some really fist-pumping violence, a couple of times resulting in some perfectly executed gore that, in the service of such a genuinely emotional story, has a powerful impact. Highly recommended.