A cop
thriller set in the world of feeders and gainers, this film
gleefully frightens and grosses out its audience every way
imaginable. Thankfully, a blackly comical tone keeps it
from being overwhelming.
We open in Toledo,
Ohio, with the charming Michael (O'Lachlan), singing along
with Cherish as he buys bags of burgers to feed to Deirdre
(Millgate), who celebrates hitting 600 pounds. Meanwhile,
Australian cyber-crime investigator Phillip (Patrick Thompson)
has just finished a ghastly cannibalism case in Hamburg
(of course!). Back in Sydney, he finds Michael's website
and realises something's not right in Toledo. So off he
goes to pursue the case, which gets far grislier than he
could have imagined.
It seems that
only Aussies could successfully combine a creepy fetish
scene with a police investigation thriller and infuse it
with character shadings and a thoroughly warp sense of humour.
On a visceral level, the film keeps us fairly queasy all
the way through, with brief interludes in which the fit
cast members strip off to show us their beautifully toned
bodies in contrast to the monstrous, extremely convincing
fat suit Millgate and others wear.
Disturbing touches
are clearly designed to freak us out and keep us on edge.
And screenwriter Galvin works in just enough character depth.
Even though it's fairly simplistic, flashbacks and other
scenes make both Michael and Phillip much more than merely
cat and mouse. Both are haunted by their pasts as well as
bad decisions they continue to make. Amid the carnage, O'Lachlan
and especially Thompson create fascinating characters that
are morally complex. As Michael asks, "Who's the real
sociopath?"
Leonard
gives the film a lush, over-coloured style that combines
with webcam-style footage to make the whole thing feel like
an internet nightmare. The fact that it was filmed in Sydney
actually helps; nothing looks quite right. Michael's neighbourhood
feels like an evil parallel-universe version of Desperate
Housewives' Wisteria Lane. And the themes are intriguingly
developed as well--codependence, consumerism, the ripple
effects of bad parenting, even the difficulty of really
trusting someone. Surprising stuff to find in a gruesome,
gripping thriller.
Feed Cast:
Alex O'Lachlan, Patrick Thompson, Gabby Millgate,
Jack Thompson,
Matthew Le Nevez, Rose Ashton, Sherly Sulaiman, Marika
Aubrey,
David Field, Adam Hunt, Yure Covich, Connor Thompson