by A.J.
Night 9: Psycho-Killer Night II (Qu'est-ce que c'est)
“One day the whole world’s gonna know my name.”
In 2022 writer-director Ti West released not one but two horror films starring Mia Goth, X and a prequel, Pearl. X is a slasher film set in 1979 about a group of people making an independent porno film on a farm owned by an elderly but homicidal woman, Pearl. Mia Goth played one of the would be adult film stars and also, under heavy makeup, Pearl. X is a well made but standard genre exercise; not exceptional but not bad either. On the other side of the coin, Pearl, a prequel showing the elderly woman in her youth, is an exceptional film. While X was genre driven, following the well established formula of a slasher film, Pearl is character driven, the result of conversations West had with Goth about the background of her character. Here, as Pearl, Mia Goth gives one of the best performances of any movie from last year in one of the best films of 2022 (and one of the best horror films of the last few years). Best of all, it truly stands on its own, so you do not need to have seen or even know about X to get the full effect of Pearl.
Set in 1918 as The Great War is drawing to a close and the Spanish Flu pandemic has people fearing disease and wearing masks, we meet young and sweet Pearl, who lives on an isolated farm with her strict German immigrant mother and invalid father but dreams of leaving and becoming a movie star. The impending return of her husband Howard from the army seems to be more of a source of anxiety than joy. Her chance at stardom comes when her blonde, all-American looking sister in law Mitzy (Emma Jenkins-Purro) tells her about an audition for a touring church dance group. In the days leading up to the audition, she will reach her deadly breaking point.
What makes Pearl a special film is Mia Goth’s performance. She has turned in great supporting performances in films like Lars Von Trier’s Nymphomaniac Vol. II, The Cure for Wellness, Suspiria (2018) and Emma.(2020), but here she really gets to shine a starring role (Yes, she is the star of X, but that script offers little for any of the performers). As a performer, Goth brings a sly, unexpected physicality to the role, from her dancing to her sudden, extreme shifts in mood and temper. Long before Pearl deals her first death blow, we know what she is capable of because of the flashes of intensity Goth shows us. She is believably sweet and naïve and innocent and also repressed and angry and maniacal and murderous.
Ti West is a very stylish director, but every flourish in Pearl, meaning every use of technique or aesthetic highlight, enhances the story instead of drawing your attention to the style itself. The most important thing about the single take close up of Pearl’s confession is Goth’s performance, not the unbroken length of the shot. There is some incongruity however between the period setting (1918 during the sepia toned silent era) and the look and sound of the film (the lavish technicolor look of the 1950’s). The score is evocative of classic Max Steiner scores (his most famous being for Gone With the Wind) and the colors are rich and bright and vivid. The grass of the farm is bright green, the red of the barn is a vivid red, and Pearl’s overalls are a striking shade of blue. It is as though the movie draws from everything someone in the 21st century might deem classic, meaning everything from before 1960. The farm girl wishing for escape story evokes The Wizard of Oz (1939), the rich colors evoke 1950’s technicolor movies of Douglas Sirk or a Doris Day/Rock Hudson movie, the story of a girl with with a sinister side evokes Joseph L. Mankiewicz’s All About Eve or Mervyn LeRoy’s The Bad Seed. In not having a specific film or genre to emulate Ti West has made a picture that feels unique.
The set pieces are not the kills but the scenes that showcase Goth’s performance (which, yes, include the kills). Her dance with a scarecrow in a cornfield shows us her light, dreamy side. Her tongue kissing the scarecrow then realizing what she’s doing and screaming at, “I’M MARRIED!” at the scarecrow and bearing her teeth in a growl, shows us a quite different side. Her extended confessional scene, an excellently written and deeply affecting monologue delivered almost entirely in one take, is the key scene to the whole movie. A great performance really can elevate an entire movie and that is just what happens here. Pearl does indeed have that “x factor” and it is Mia Goth.
Pearl is available to stream on Showtime, Paramount+ with Showtime, and is available on DVD/Blu-ray.
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