Original title: Mata Batin
When her parents die in an accident, Alia (Jessica Mila) has to return from
her new home in Thailand to her native Indonesia to take care of her teenage
sister Abel (Bianca Hello). For financial reasons, they have to move back into
their childhood home in the country, a place Abel fears with quite some
intensity; or rather, she fears something dwelling in the house. As it
turns out with good reason, for Abel is cursed with the ability to see the
spirits of the dead and other supernatural manifestations, and as it usually
goes, the dead see her right back. Alia has been kept in the belief that her
sister simply has some psychological troubles, but as Abel explains to her,
their mother had not been taking her to a psychiatrist as the family told Alia,
but to the psychic Bu Windu (Citra Prima) to help her cope with her
abilities.
Even on meeting Bu Windu, Alia still doesn’t quite believe what her sister is
telling her, so she asks the woman to force open her own third eye, so she can
see the things her sister says are there with her own eyes. This being a horror
movie, ghosts and such are all too real, and soon, the two sisters, Bu Windu,
and Alia’s frightfully nice boyfriend Davin (Denny Sumargo) will have to fight
against the things haunting their home.
I love Netflix more than just a little bit for the surprising number of
Indonesian genre films it has distributed over the last couple of years, making
it pleasantly easy to actually watch some of the better movies coming from the
country right now while also avoiding the “tight tops and horrible humour”
subgenre that seems rather prevalent (though I might of course be totally wrong
about that, seeing that international distribution for Indonesian films is –
Netflix notwithstanding - spotty to say the least).
Rocky Soraya’s The 3rd Eye is no new masterpiece of horror cinema,
but its mixture of typical “I see dead people” plot beats, Indonesian style
creatures, a smidgen of possession horror with a very spirited performance by
the actress involved, and a third act that goes into a surprising direction for
this particular horror subgenre (though you can diagnose a Poltergeist
influence, if you wish), is always at least entertaining, and often downright
fun in a spook show kind of way.
As a director, Soraya (who also co-wrote the script and produced) lets a
small budget look slick, generally tending to relatively conservative
directorial choices while keeping the pace just right. He also clearly
understands that the make-up effects and the creature design are one of the
film’s strengths, and plays this aspect up as much as possible without things
becoming (too) tacky. Add to this the surprising turn towards a bit of gore and
violence in the third act as well as the pretty incredible climax of the film,
and you have yourself something clearly made by someone who knows his
horror.
Speaking of the climax, as a fan of theoretically visionary scenes made on a
budget, I got quite the kick out of the way Soraya creates a hell dimension out
of a handful of tunnels, some weeds, deftly applied red light, and a handful of
actors in pretty great makeup, keeping the afterlife surreal, and surprisingly
convincing. It helps that this part of the film – as well as the excellent
scenes coming directly before – mostly keep away from CGI and go for more
practical effects, for the digital effects throughout the film are much weaker
than the practical ones.
So even though The 3rd Eye isn’t a deep movie that’s telling us much
about the human condition, it’s quite a bit of fun if you’re in the market for a
bit of horror not meant to evoke existential despair. Plus, there’s a cameo
by a Ghost with Hole.
Wednesday, July 31, 2019
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