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‘Longlegs’ Review – Oz Perkins’ Latest Gets Under Your Skin and Festers Like a Putrid Nightmare

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Longlegs

The concept of evil gets explored often in horror in various ways, but very few films manage to immerse viewers in that evil so wholly that it starts to feel like you’re watching something taboo and cursed. The latest by writer/director Oz Perkins (Gretel & Hansel, The Blackcoat’s Daughter), Longlegs gets under your skin and stays there, immersing you so thoroughly in the repulsive, discomforting nature of evil through terrifying imagery and a tactile atmosphere that it’s unshakable. Its nerve-shredding, insidious style of horror serves as a perfect rebuttal to society’s obsession with true crime; evil just exists, and it taints everything it touches.

Much like the marketing, Longlegs plays it close to the vest as it follows young FBI recruit Lee Harker (Maika Monroe), whose uncanny sense of intuition draws the attention of the tenured Agent Carter (Blair Underwood). Harker is so naturally gifted that Carter pulls the agent into his ongoing investigation of serial killer Longlegs (an unrecognizable Nicolas Cage), a demented figure so elusive that the trail to catch him has gone cold. The more that Harker makes headway on the case, though, the stranger things get as Longlegs takes notice of her pursuit. It sets both on a collision course filled with grisly crime scenes and unspeakable evil.

Longlegs Blair Underwood

Oz Perkins unmoors Longlegs from time and reality in a way that intentionally disorients, contributing to a pervading and suffocating sense of dread and foreboding. Small details, like a portrait of Bill Clinton hung behind Agent Carter’s desk, give a general feeling of the era, but the sepia hues and vintage aesthetic speak more to Longlegs’ lengthy history with murder spanning multiple decades, so much so that the killer feels otherworldly. That’s further helped by Nicolas Cage’s most unsettling performance yet. Perkins refreshingly keeps this curious character as enigmatic and elusive as possible, giving only glimpses into the killer’s machinations and treating him more as a peculiar boogeyman. It makes the short bursts of Cage’s eerie freakouts all the more impactful and unnerving. 

Cage is operating in rare, depraved form, but the entire cast is firing on all cylinders. Underwood infuses his character with enough warmth and savvy to balance Monroe’s socially awkward, closed-off Lee, helping humanize the prickly protagonist as he mentors her. Alicia Witt is also in rare form as Lee’s mom, a disturbed hoarder who reminds Lee to keep up her prayers. Lee shrugs her mother’s prodding off, but the increasingly oppressive atmosphere suggests that perhaps she should listen.

It’s not just the grainy vintage look, the eerie sound design, and moody color palette that contributes to Perkins’ ability to capture the essence of evil on screen so well. It’s in the subtle, almost subliminal imagery that’s constantly present. Almost imperceptible silhouettes and demonic forms are lurking in the background in scenes. Voyeuristic shadowed figures or inhuman eyes linger just enough to catch your notice before fading quietly into the ether.

Lee’s bid to thwart Longlegs builds to a suitably insane finale, with no shortage of grotesque and shocking violence along the way. Violence that is rendered more effective thanks to the skin-crawling tone that Perkins sets from the outset. Longlegs injects a true crime story with putrid Satanism and refuses to handhold, serving as a visceral rebuttal to society’s compulsive need to find logic in the most heinous of crimes. Evil simply exists, and in Longlegs, it’s everywhere, watching and biding its time while reveling in the carnage its presence wreaks.

Longlegs is as stylish as it is timeless, dripping with claustrophobic dread and rot.

Longlegs releases in theaters on July 12, 2024.

Editor’s Note: This review was originally published on June 10, 2024.

4.5 skulls out of 5

Horror journalist, RT Top Critic, and Critics Choice Association member. Co-Host of the Bloody Disgusting Podcast. Has appeared on PBS series' Monstrum, served on the SXSW Midnighter shorts jury, and moderated horror panels for WonderCon and SeriesFest.

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‘Project Silence’ Review – Killer Dogs Make This Korean Disaster Movie Unique

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Project Silence

The “disaster movie” is not quite as visible as it used to be in Hollywood, but thankfully for fans, South Korea has more than picked up the slack. In just the last two decades, Koreans have had to deal with a variety of catastrophes on screen, including a tsunami, a collapsed tunnel, an unstable power plant, and multiple zombie outbreaks. The latest offering in this genre, however, stands out from all the rest. Not because the disaster in question is unique; a bridge pile-up is only the beginning in Kim Tae-gon‘s Project Silence.

This movie doesn’t waste any time getting to its main attraction; after their cursory and brief introductions, the core characters all make their way to the ill-fated bridge where multiple dangers loom. When this looks to be another case of rag-tag strangers coming together for their collective survival — and it very much is one — the initial ordeal is topped off with a second helping of calamity. Straight out of left field, the story introduces a pack of killer dogs. These top secret and military trained mutts escape their masters, ignore commands, and then go berserk on the bridge survivors. The ensuing dog-on-human mayhem is less intense than you might have anticipated or desired, yet these encounters grow in number as the pared-down cast searches for help and explores the creatures’ origin.

Project Silence refreshingly comes in under 100 minutes, and its tights-as-braids pacing leaves virtually no time for collecting your breath or developing the characters. Apart from the hero, a single dad and sometimes unethical aide for a presidential candidate (Lee Sun-kyun, Parasite), everyone coasts on their meager characterizations rather than grows. Lee’s character can be especially difficult to get behind, due in large part to his compromised ethics, but his flaws also make him a tad more interesting than the usual key players in these kinds of movies. As for his character’s teenage daughter (Kim Su-an, Train to Busan), she eventually escapes her dual role as damsel-in-distress and her father’s moral compass. Directly supporting the central family dynamic is a wacky tow truck driver (Ju Ji-hoon) whose comic relief and pluckiness break up this situation’s direness.

Considering all the scenes of extensive dog action, Project Silence relies on digital effects. The stunts require much more than a real dog could or should pull off. The bleak and foggy environment helps to obscure the uncanny valley effect, although you are never at all convinced these are anything other than CGI dogs. Nonetheless, this is not a cheap movie, and the money is evident on screen. Even the four-legged antagonists — whose backstory will tug at animal lovers’ hearts, regardless of their artifice — are occasionally impressive. The disaster set-pieces, on the other hand, are consistently fun, if not fleeting; their immersive designs and thrilling executions get the blood pumping.

The late Lee Sun-kyun turned in a solid final performance, boosting the profile of an expensive “B” movie. The energetic, unflinching execution also compensates for any less innovative and more predictable parts. Without its random creature-feature aspect, though, Project Silence would likely go undetected or be soon forgotten. Fortunately, the dog element gives this movie a better chance of survival.

Project Silence is now playing in select U.S. theaters.

3 skulls out of 5

Project Silence

Image: Poster for Project Silence courtesy of Capelight Pictures.

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