Martha et al.,
however, is not that kind of cult
film but is instead a film about
a cult—and, rather than midnight, it will be screened at the Saratoga Film Forum Thursday and
Friday, January 19th and 20th, at 7:30 p.m., and Sunday, January 22nd at 3:00
p.m.
Films about cults are
surprisingly few and far between, at least beyond those TV “movie of the
week” tales common in the 1970s and 80s about brainwashing and deprogramming.
Dramatically, 1981’s Ticket
to Heaven was the product of a late
70s/early 80s “cult mania” as the Moonies, Guyana, and others were in the news at the time, while
1999’s Holy Smoke!
(starring Harvey Keitel and Kate Winslet)
takes a more Eastern route.
Martha et al. takes a
different approach, and becomes much more of a psychological—perhaps even
existential—thriller than a cautionary tale about brainwashing. Newcomer
Elizabeth Olsen (she is the younger sister of Mary-Kate Olsen and Ashley Olsen)
stars as all three title characters: her proper name is “Martha,” while “Marcy
May” is the name bestowed upon her by the leader of the cult she has found
herself a member of, and “Marlene” is the generic name all the women use when they
answer the phone. So
right off the bat you can see there’s a bit of an identity crisis in the
making.
Martha was led to join the cult—which is based in the
Catskills—because of things that had gone wrong in her earlier life, although
we don’t really know a great deal about what those things might have been. All
the women in the cult are damaged psychologically in some way, and those kinds
of damages are often what lead people to join cults.
The other thing that lures impressionable people—particularly
young people—into cults is a charismatic leader. Let’s face it, few cults would
be successful if they were run by complete shlumps. So Patrick (John Hawkes) is
the charming Svengali, playing the guitar, extolling a seemingly appealing countercultural philosophy, and knows
how to push all the right buttons of impressionable young girls (and a few
boys).
We only see the workings of the cult in retrospect, and in pieces. Martha
has escaped the cult and fled to the home of her older sister Lucy (Sarah
Paulson) and Lucy’s husband Ted (Hugh Dancy). It’s not the most comfortable of
reunions, especially since Martha is silent on where she had been and what she
had been doing; for all Lucy and Ted know, she just ran away from a boyfriend.
However, as she readjusts to living with Lucy and Ted, she has flashbacks to
her life in the cult, triggered by everyday activities. Her experience of cult
life was at such an impressionable age, she is now unsure how “normal” people
behave. To wit: in the cult, sex was a communal activity, and at one point
Martha freaks out Lucy and Ted by, um, joining them. Awkward, to say the least.
Martha Marcy May Marlene
is the sister film (so to speak) of director Sean Durkin’s 2010 short film “Mary Last Seen” which, like Martha et al., also played Sundance and Cannes. The two
stories, while related, evolved together. Said the press notes for the Cannes
screening of Martha et al. (via In
Contention.com):
The script for MARTHA MARCY MAY
MARLENE took time to evolve. “I started in 2007 and was writing for a couple of
years before we started to think about making it. It takes place in the summer
and we wanted to shoot it in New York, so we had a three to four-month window.
We tried to get it going in 2009 and the script wasn’t quite right. I had never
done anything as a director to show people, either. I’d made a student short
but it wasn’t something I wanted to show people since it wasn’t representative
of what the feature film would be.”
Durkin decided to shoot a short
instead that summer, MARY LAST SEEN, casting actor Brady Corbet in a role that
he would reprise for the feature film, as a cult member who becomes Martha’s
boyfriend. “I wanted to direct a short that was related,” recalls Durkin, “but
I didn’t want it to be about Martha. I had all this rich material about how
people get involved in cults, but that’s not what the script was about. I knew
Brady Corbet was going to be playing Watts [in the feature] and wanted to do
something with him as the same character. That’s where the short came from.
I'll comment more once I figure out this posting thing.
ReplyDeleteThanks for creating this, hope people use it to air views.
ReplyDeleteThat was one disturbing movie. Even the formate, the flashbacks, gave insight into the apparent mind of a cult victim.
I could not help but thinking that this girl was lucky to have such a loving sister. I doubt I would have such compassion. Maybe if more of us had such compassion, cults would be impossible. Food for thought!
Thanks again.