Movie review: 'Obsession' a cautionary tale told with dark and dread-filled flair
Published in Entertainment News
As young men flinched and gasped around me at the Los Angeles premiere of “Obsession,” I almost had to laugh. A slight head tilt, creepy smile or strange movement from star Inde Navarrette was enough to make them jump, and I had the realization that the most terrifying thing for a young man these days is an emotionally unregulated and unpredictable woman. Keep that one in your back pocket, ladies.
The theory bore out at the end of the film when the guy next to me admitted to his date, “that’s the scariest thing for me … girls.” The young man behind “Obsession,” 26-year-old filmmaker Curry Barker, has certainly tapped into that unique fear with his splashy breakout horror film. “Obsession” is his second feature, arriving hot on the heels of his self-distributed film “Milk & Serial,” an outgrowth of the sketch comedy and horror shorts he’s been making for YouTube, with collaborator Cooper Tomlinson, who co-stars in “Obsession.”
Written, directed and edited by Barker, “Obsession” comes from a simple, familiar premise, executed with a dark and dread-filled flair. Barker combines the monkey’s paw and Pygmalion myths in this story of a young man who wishes that his dream girl would fall in love with him. You know what they say about love spells (don’t do them), and the way it unfolds in Barker’s vision is bleak, bloody and seriously disturbing.
Our unlucky simp is Bear (Michael Johnston), one of a quartet of early-20-something friends who work at a music store and get drunk at trivia as often as possible. It’s clear from the start that even though Bear is crushing on Nikki (Navarrette), it’s actually Sarah (Megan Lawless) who has feelings for Bear, while Ian (Tomlinson), his best friend, weirdly undermines his efforts with Nikki any chance he gets.
Hoping to confess his feelings and win her over, Bear buys Nikki a trinket at a head shop, a One Wish Willow, though the clerk warns him he can’t return with any complaints. After a disastrous conversation, Bear ends up making the wish himself, breaking the stick and wishing that Nikki would love him more than anyone else in the world, his caution obliterated by emotion.
For a brief moment, it’s a sweet, cozy scenario, even though their friends are baffled by the new connection. But needy, possessive Nikki smothers Bear, and what plays out is a horrifying tale of obsessive love gone wrong — sour, curdled and violent. As her behavior becomes increasingly troubling and self-destructive, Bear realizes he’s trapped in her jealous loop, the only way out through death.
The story isn’t complicated, and it’s one we know well, rendered with spooky, atmospheric aesthetics and intensely gnarly violence that provide cover for the thin premise, nagging plot holes and flimsy characterization in the script, which traffics in poorly explained archetypes. It’s sufficient enough, but the strength of the filmmaking is not in the writing, but in Barker’s command of style, pace and performance. Taylor Clemons’ cinematography is excellent, all slow creeping shots and shadows permeating even the daytime scenes. An eerie, enchanting score by Rock Burwell giving the proceedings a dreamy, nightmarish quality.
But it’s the performances that elevate “Obsession” and give it a real sense of danger. Johnston carries the film and the emotional core, but Navarrette delivers the kind of instant classic horror performance that will surely traumatize Gen Z for years. Her hysterical grin sets your teeth on edge; she alternates between swiftness and stillness in her uncanny movement. Johnston plays poor Bear as a quivering mess wracked with guilt that this monster — who used to be his friend — is the result of his own terrible decision-making. You wanted a girlfriend? Here’s “Freaky Nikki.”
The smartest choice Barker makes is the inclusion of the moments where Nikki snaps out of it, briefly coming to, or pleading with Bear in her sleep to “kill her,” reminding us that Nikki, as menacing as she is, never wanted this. The only villain here is Bear, or perhaps it’s the social expectations that young men think they should just be able to have whomever they want. If anything, “Obsession” should serve as a cautionary tale — for boys. The way they reacted in the theater, it seems like it landed. Girls are scary, and don’t you forget it.
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'OBSESSION'
3 stars (out of 4)
MPA rating: R (for strong bloody violence, grisly images, sexual content, pervasive language, and brief graphic nudity)
Running time: 1:48
How to watch: In theaters May 15
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