This
is the kind of film you admire rather than like--a murky,
muddy drama that probes into the dark recesses of the soul.
Yule shows considerable skill as a director, although it's
all a bit over-constructed.
Mike
(Berthelsen) is hitchhiking through Scotland when he's picked
up by a friendly doctor (Bond), who thinks a local farm
might offer him work and lodging. Sure enough, blind farm
owner Francis (Mullan) needs help. Alas, Francis' young
wife Rachel (May) takes a shine to Mike. Francis may not
be able to see, but he clearly knows the plot of Double
Indemnity, as he becomes increasingly convinced that Mike
is going to steal both Rachel and the farm.
Yule
creates an enticingly moody atmosphere right from the start.
The damp, gloomy setting establishes a foreboding tone that
grows as Francis works himself into a lather of jealousy
and suspicion. As do the other characters. The actors have
plenty to sink their teeth into--the script gurgles with
suppressed (or not-so-suppressed) passions and bitterness.
Nobody can see, as it were, beyond the lies in and around
them. Mullan rages brilliantly; May looks on in wide-eyed,
possibly imagined horror; Mike tries to sort the truth from
the lies in his own secretive past, let alone the present;
even Law gets in on the fun, as Francis' angst-ridden mother.
Yes,
it's quite heavy, with little real-life humour to lighten
the load. And the story gets increasingly complex and internalised--and
gruesome. Heavy symbolism fills the story, from the bottomless
blackness of the mud pit to Mike's glaring white flashbacks
to the sudden burst of cheery daffodils. And the plot itself
is equally suggestive, especially when it takes a startling,
unnecessarily symmetrical turn in the end.
But
along the way, Yule manages to send chills down our spines
with some clever ghostly sequences, as well as the Hitchcock-style
tale of a not-so-innocent man caught up in events beyond
his control. On the other hand, Yule seems to see this as
a particularly challenging love story. But there's just
not enough believable passion between Mike and Rachel to
propel the dramatic intensity. And in the end, despite the
style and depth, it feels somewhat pointless.