Monday, December 5, 2022

Songs in the Key of Lies

Under the Silver Lake (The Songwriter scene)
(David Robert Mitchell, 2018)
 

Considering David Robert Mitchell's debut film It Follows (2014) marked him as one third of horror cinema's hottest trifecta (along with Jennifern Kent's The Babadook (2014) and Richard Eggers' The Witch (2015)), his sophomore effort, Under the Silver Lake (2018), was something of a disappointment for yours truly. What's really heartbreaking about it are the numerous elements and ideas introduced which are greatly appealing: ranging from cryptic codes, Hollywood's elitism, mysterious tunnels beneath L.A and etc, feeling squandered after having to sit through its long running time.

The problems with Under the Silver Lake really do lie with Mitchell punching above his weight, since its premise feels overly ambitious in his hands and all too random; resulting in many of the film's questions either remaining unanswered, or given the quintessential ambiguous treatment; which is a familiar cop-out whenever a film maker over extends their reach. Also, when fans are having to resort to external sources like the internet in order to decypher hidden meanings and messages just to fill the gaps, then that defeats the objective of any good mystery, in my opinion.

What Under the Silver Lake does have, however, is a fantastic scene where Adam Garfield's wasteman meets the mysterious, Illuminati-like songwriter. He is the architect to many classic songs and jingles glorified in popular culture. It's a compelling scene where the old timer tinkers away on his piano while simultaneously crushing Andrew Garfield's very soul. The realisation that those beloved songs Garfield cherished were like disposable fodder to the elderly songwriter, makes this scene pure gold.

Managed to revisit Under the Silver Lake again recently, and while this time around the experience kind of cushioned the blow, its flaws are still apparent. A real shame, as it potentially could have been one of the best films of the 2010s, if Mitchell had a bit more experience under his belt.

5 comments:

Kelvin Mack10zie said...

Damn, that's a brutal scene. Also the funniest prosthetic old man's face I've seen since Dan Akroyd in Nothing But Trouble.

David Robert Mitchell joining Charles Laughton, Terrence Malick and Neil Blomkamp in the One Movie Wonder camp. Who else qualifies?

Spartan said...

Herk Harvey (Carnival of Souls), Douglas McKeown (The Deadly Spawn), Gerald Kargl (Angst) and Mariano Baino (Dark Waters), would be my picks.

Spartan said...

Shout out to Dick Smith's old man make-up effects on Max Von Sydow's face for The Exorcist. Turned out being prophetic.

Kelvin Mack10zie said...

Ah Henk Hervey is top 5 dead or alive for real.

Spartan said...

Surprisingly, all three directors for Man Bites Dog made no other feature films.