(aka
Not Inside part II)
Release Date: On DVD now (Germany.)
Written & Directed by: Alexandre Bustillo and Julien Maury.
Starring: Chloe Coulloud, Catherine Jacob, Marie-Claude Pietragalla and Chloe Marcq.
We've been waiting for
Bustillo and Maury's follow up to their 2007 French classic,
Inside, for years now.
Inside was a nasty little movie that stuck with us long after we had seen it, and we we're hoping to be equally as disturbed by their newest offering,
Livide.
Well, we were and we weren't.
Lucie is a young, hot French chick who just got a job as a traveling nurse. She's got two different colored eyes (which is foreshadowing about having two souls or something), and can't follow directions very well. While traveling around visiting patients and learning her new routine, she's told to stay in the car by her trainer,
Mrs. Wilson, because "she's not ready" to handle the likes of their last patient of the day.
Lucie of course doesn't stay in the car and wanders into the creepy old mansion of
Mrs. Jessel, which pretty much seals her fate.
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Creepy tea party from hell. |
Lucie finds
Mrs. Wilson attending to the comatose
Mrs. Jessel. Her trainer tells her of a secret treasure rumored to be hidden somewhere in the creepy house, and that
Jessel had a daughter who died under mysterious circumstances, many years ago. Those two plot elements should be enough to terrify most people into never wanting to come back into the house, but not Lucie, because she's not very bright.
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Relax, it's just a doll. |
Lucie hatches a scheme with her boyfriend and another nitwit to break into
Jessel's house, find the treasure for themselves, and live rich and easy for the rest of their lives.The problem is that the treasure involves vampire ballerina kids, teleportation mirrors, a floating house, and plenty of nuance. Needless to say, the blood flows and people die in horrible ways, and we're not exactly sure what in the hell happens at the end.
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Flashdance! |
Livide is a gorgeous and very atmospheric movie, which is really quite something to behold. While not as effective as their first film,
Inside (2007),
Bustillo and Maury absolutely know how to craft and direct a movie that pulls you in and plays with your fear buttons. The movie felt a lot like
Suspiria at times, and in fact was an homage to the
Argento classic, although there were definitely differences between the two, both technically and aesthetically.
Think of
Livide as a new twist on the vampire mythos, with some elements of witchcraft and serial murder thrown in, all wrapped up in some odd sort of fantasy blanket. It's thematically complex at times, and overtly bloody and gory at others. It's definitely a mixture of a lot of elements, all of which work or fail to varying degrees. It did lack focus and felt anything but linear, which detracted a bit from the overall good quality of what we saw on screen.
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There's always some sort of eye torture in these Italian-inspired French horror flicks, isn't there? |
The whole subplot involving the two guys convincing
Lucie to rob the house really should have been left out of the movie, as it only truly served to get them into the house so that the rest of the movie could happen. It felt sloppy and unnecessary. Why couldn't they have explored the other subplot with the creepy chick abducting kids and draining them of their blood... that would have been more satisfying and effective, in our opinion.
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Why the hood? |
What exactly was this movie trying to be? At first, we're given a creepy and atmospheric horror flick that showed signs of being truly great, but then as the film wore on, it became more of a dark fantasy movie. By the end, it felt like some sort of spiritual meditation of the freedom of the soul or something. Maybe it was the ending itself that mad things so awkward, because it was a little bit... out of place. Metaphor and sentimentality twisted this movie into a bit of a confusing mess at times. The movie was too ambitious for its own good.
There's plenty of bloody and disturbing elements to be found here, most of them involving vampire shenanigans of some sort. Lots of kid violence too.It wasn't as visceral as some other French horror offerings such as
Inside or
Martyrs, but there was enough.
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Maybe she fell down in the tub? |
Nope, but we do get to see a creepy old lady laying in bed wearing an oxygen mask, if that's your thing.
Dance lessons lead to nothing but death. Also, you really shouldn't ever try to steal from a helpless old woman in a coma, because it's a trap.
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Fun times at the Dance Academy of Death. |
Livide is a movie that falls into the
B-range because it's a well made, mostly effective and gorgeous film, filled with enough gore and menace to satisfy the average horror fan. If it would have been a bit more focused, lost the jump scares and made a bit more rational sense, it could have definitely been an
A-range movie. As it stands,
Livide is a solid effort that you should check out when you're able, just don't be surprised if you find yourself saying "What the hell just happened?" afterwards.
Chloe Coulloud is one hot French girl, as evidenced by her facial features and nice figure. We don't make this stuff up, it's just how it is.