Hereditary Movie Review: It Is More Pretentious Than Portentous!

Heriditary

Starring Toni Collette, Gabriel Byrne, Alex Wolff, Amelia Shapiro

Advertisement

Directed by Ari Aster

Rating:**(2 stars)

Advertisement

The devil, as they say, lies in the details. The Devil, if you must know,also lies. And the details be damned.
Hereditary, a horror film with pretensions of being erudite and profound ,is more ill-formed than informed. It is one of those shiver givers that just dooesn’t know where to stop. Filled with cryptic signs and ominous symbols, borrowed from heretical mythology it tries to use the humdrum atmosphere of domesticity to whip up a frenzy of anxieties converging on two deaths in a family that happen one after another.

The family dynamics in the drama of the damned is quite unmistakably inspired by Robert Redford’s directorial debut Ordinary People where the surviving son must live and probably die of guilt after the other child is killed.

Advertisement

I remember Timothy Hutton stealing the show from his screen parents in Ordinary People. Alex Wolff as the grieving hurting son in Hereditary is all that I carried home from this painful film about pain and retribution.

Related Post

First-time director Ari Aster covers up a lot of his performing anxieties by using his brilliant actors in spaces half-filled with light and bathed in a pervasive gloom that creates an atmosphere of gathering alarm and doom. The film is interestingly shot with characters standing in unexpected corners of the consciously-askew composed frames looking on at situations and scenes that cannot humanly be expressed.

Advertisement

Then it all begins to fall apart. As Toni Collette, an actress usually seen to display substantial skill in conveying emotions, falls into a spiky sickening groove creating a progressive drama of diabolic domesticity that reaches a flashpoint after a series of craftily staged calamities which are both gruesome and rudderless.

The is more séance than sense, and it’s all more pretentious than portentous.

Advertisement

The scenes within the family home meant to show a diabolic desecration of domesticity, are shrill in tone . What the debutant director does is to lay out the shock in fleeting images of decapitated heads and maggot-infested faces.These come on screen to jolt us. But the jolts are unintentionally preposterous. In one startling sequence a character dies a gruesome death. But we quickly whisked away from the scene of the tragedy without seeing the outcome.Makes you wonder.Whom is the director protecting?

By the time the characters attain a mythological puberty the climactic violence is all set to be staged in waves of relayed violence. Sure, it shocks. But is that enough? The erudite references to the satanic scriptures do not take away from our feeling that this was a film which could have internalized the horror of bereavement and relentless grief. Instead the exteriorized anguish is done up in stylish but ultimately sterile terror-images that do nothing to our sense of the scares except to remind us that the horror genre can’t be taken too far away from its roots without the eerie components falling apart.

Advertisement

In Hereditary the plot comes apart at the end, as unhinged as the main character who goes from grieving mother to shrieking Satanism. Collette embarrasses everyone including herself. It’s like watching your parent pee in the pants.

Why are we even watching this film in a country where blind faith and superstitions still command our population’s destiny?

Advertisement
Vaibhav Choudhary

Leave a Comment

Recent Posts

Rishi Kapoor Had A Run-In  With  Manoj Kumar

Rishi Kapoor worked only once with Manoj Kumar  .And that  didn’t go too well. The film… Read More

11th April 2025

Quila Of A  Film, Why Was The Great Dilip Kumar’s Last Film So Awful? Quila Completes 27 Years

The  mythical Meena  Kumari’s last film was  not the timeless Pakeezah but an atrocity  named  Gomti Ke Kinare where … Read More

10th April 2025

Adil Hussain On 8 Years Of Mukti Bhawan

One of your  best works Mukti Bhawan Is 8  years old now? Mukti Bhawan is… Read More

10th April 2025

10 Interesting Stories Behind Famous TV Catchphrases

Catchphrases are common in many TV shows—from Joey asking “How you doin’?” in Friends to… Read More

5th April 2025

Tributes To Manoj  Kumar

Waheeda Rehman who did  a string of superhits has  huge compliments to pay Manoj  Kumar.… Read More

4th April 2025

On His 70th Birthday, The Best Of Hariharan

On His  70th  Birthday, The Best  Of Hariharan  .Tum gaye sabb gaya(Maachis):  This  heartstopping  meditative melody   on  lost love… Read More

3rd April 2025