aka Daddy’s Deadly Darling
A young, tense woman we will later learn is called Lynn (Toni Lawrence,
fittingly enough the actual daughter of director, writer and male lead Marc
Lawrence) ends up at the middle of nowhere, rural California, diner of former
circus magician Zambrini (Marc Lawrence). As luck will have it, the place is in
need of a new waitress, after the old one just up and left one day. The job
offer is a bit strange, though, for it doesn’t look at all as if the place
actually needs anyone apart from its owner. There is nary a guest in
sight, what with the diner placed far from roads anyone actually uses, and
Zambrini not being too well loved by anyone living in the area. His elderly
closest neighbours for example believe that something is very wrong with
Zambrini’s pigs (not to speak of the man himself). According to them, the
animals regularly pop up outside of their house making an unpleasant racket.
Supposedly, they are man eaters, but a special kind where the pig-eaten corpse
somehow becomes a new pig. And let’s not even start on the weird dreams the
ladies have about Zambrini.
Ironically enough, Zambrini does indeed feed corpses – some of which he digs
up in the local graveyard – to his pigs, and he’s certainly not above murdering
and turning the most annoying members of the local community to better use. He
does get along rather well with Lynn though. There’s clearly something very
wrong with her, too, something having to do with her father and a curious
relation to sex. Still, Zambrini and Lynn fit together well, he doing his –
creepy-crazy – best to be a father figure and she clearly getting into the role
of being a daughter. Zambrini’s and Lynn’s respective dark secrets and that nosy
outside world won’t let them end up as a Whedonesque family of choice,
though.
Directed by its male lead, long-time character actor Mark Lawrence,
Pigs is one of my personal favourites among the strange and lovely
breed of US local independent film productions. It was apparently shot on an
actual ranch in California, and is consequently set in what at first feels and
looks very much like a real place. It’s not as decayed as this sort of creepy
horror film rural spot usually is, but certainly looks like it is becoming a bit
decrepit, lending the locations a sense of the kind of decay you only ever seem
to notice out of the corner of your eye. This provides Pigs with
copious amounts of instant atmosphere, as well as an air of reality that just
might keep a viewer from realizing how bizarre (in all the best ways) parts of
the film actually are.
And it does get bizarre: just look at the curious sequence in which Zambrini
visits and threatens his nosy neighbours, dressed in the full regalia of his
former magician alter ago The Great Zambrini. It is, most probably, a dream
sequence expressing the ladies’ anxiety about their strange neighbour and his
pigs, yet Lawrence neither starts nor ends it in any of the ways movies signal
dream sequences, and their ends and beginnings to us. Given that the rest of the
film is of a more than coherent and competent technical level, Lawrence surely
is doing this on purpose, using the breaking of filmic rules to disquiet his
audience, suggesting the seemingly naturalistic world the characters live in is
deceptive, that madness or something much stranger might be closer to the
surface than you’d suspect.
There are in fact quite a few intelligent directorial decisions of this kind
throughout the movie, moments when small or big details suggest unsettling
things, or when the bizarre (or perhaps even the Weird) nestles in among
quotidian detail.
All of which elevates a film that is already a fine example of atmospheric,
low budget psycho horror (with two psychos for the price of one) with a couple
of scenes for the grindhouse audience, into stranger and higher realms. The main
reason why this approach works out so well for the film does lie in its
insistence on taking its two main characters seriously, treating what could be
two cliché psychos as human beings, first securing this as a film about
dysfunctional, enabling father daughter relations in extremis – with a
quasi-feminist side-line, even – before adding the more exalted and the bizarre
things on top.
Acting-wise, this is a nice showcase for both Lawrences, who manage to sell
everything to the audience, actually making this viewer care for its
two murderous main characters quite a bit. Poor Lynn at least never seems to
have had much of a chance of a happy life thanks to her past as a victim of male
abuse. And Zambrini? Well, what’s a guy to do when his pigs develop a taste for
human flesh, and nobody leaves him and the girl he wants to protect in
peace?
Wednesday, January 3, 2018
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