Music

A24’s Lamb is Slow-Burn Folk Horror Like Ewe Have Never


master mentalism tricks

The Pitch: Out in the foggy hills of Iceland, Maria (Noomi Rapace) and Ingvar (Hilmir Snær Gudnason), a couple spending a dignified, quiet existence on their sheep farm, reside far from the rest of civilization. It’s relatively unspoken, but one intuits early that they’re reeling from the recent loss of a child. It still stings, but the two press on in their virtually silent existence, going about their chores and assisting their ewes’ new births. One day, a member of the flock gives birth to a curious creature — an uncanny hybrid of man and lamb — that the pair immediately adopt as their own child. Her name? Ada.

But as the three of them build a strangely comforting existence together, their fog-shrouded idyll is disrupted by forces outside their control. The arrival of Ingvar’s dead-weight brother Pétur (Björn Hlynur Haraldsson); the jealousy of Ada’s birth mother, who feels terrifyingly compelled to bring back her young. And, of course, whatever the mysterious sire of the half-human cryptid may be.

Shear Terror: From its marketing materials, you’d be forgiven for thinking Lamb is another Classic A24 horror of the Witch and Midsommar mold; far from it. Like its titular moppet, Valdimir Jóhannsson’s debut film is a bit of a hybrid of its own — it shares DNA with everything from Icelandic horror-thrillers to the slow, contemplative work of Béla Tarr (which tracks, considering Jóhannsson studied under Tarr, and the latter is an executive producer).

Squint hard, and you can even see the rhythms of Viktor Kossakovsky’s naturalistic livestock-centered documentary Gunda, with its camera often at eye level with the various fauna we see. Not just lambs and sheep, mind you, but the couple’s adorable dog and cat to boot.

Lamb (A24)Lamb (A24)

Lamb (A24)

Cinematographer Eli Arenson leans hard into the innate, subtle horror of the Icelandic setting, building a world in which both the fertile greens of their hillsides and the snow-covered isolation of the farm find warmth and menace in equal purchase. He films his subjects with a matter-of-factness that makes their strangeness stand out all the more: Rapace’s soulful, sharp features give way to maternal warmth and emotion under his lens, and Gudnason flits between grief and serenity in the blink of an eye.

VERY Wool: But, of course, the real ticket draw for Lamb is its eponymous creature, rendered with great care and straightforwardness by a seamless mixture of CG and practical animatronics. You simply can’t take your eyes off Ada, both by virtue of the technical achievement of her existence and the nightmarish nature of her existence. At first, Jóhannsson hides Ada’s true nature from you, using careful camera angles and the reactions of the humans around her to sell her odd proportions.

But then you see her — a barely-human body with a lamb’s head and one arm ending in a stump of a hoof — and a switch flips in the filmmaking. Suddenly, Arenson films her just like one of the other characters, an approach that’s mined for both pitch-black comedy (it’s Scandinavian, is there any other kind?) and uncomfortable disquiet. Even as Ada gets old enough to put on clothes and take walks with her parents (and eventually Pétur, who begins the film as a potential disrupter to their peace before being taken in by Ada’s appeal), the image never loses its eerieness, filling the most unassuming domestic scenes with nauseous unease.

Lamb (A24)Lamb (A24)

Lamb (A24)

Lamb doesn’t have to fill itself with jump scares or things that go bump in the night, though Ingvar Lunderg and Björn Viktorsson’s crunching, bleating sound design certainly gives our ears plenty to warn us about. The hook of the premise, however slowly and methodically Jóhannsson plays it out, is enough: What motivates this couple to take in a barely-human creature to fill the void in their lives? What price will they pay to keep it? And what forces might lie in wait to punish them for their violation of nature’s dictates?

The Verdict: Admittedly, stretches of Lamb run a little too thin, and Jóhannsson’s dedication to his enigmatic tone leaves some elements feeling undercooked (and, given the protein, probably a little gamey?). It often feels more like a thought experiment extended to feature-length than a story of its own. And yet, the commitment to its bleak, full-throated exploration of these ideas, its unexpected roots in ancient Icelandic folklore, and Rapace’s performance can help get even skeptical audiences over the fence.

Lamb takes on the ominous, warning air of an old fable, the kind of pre-Grimm fairy tale meant to threaten the gullible with punishment for transgressing against the natural order of things. And in that respect, it’s a mighty debut, one worthy to see what else Jóhannsson has to offer. Give it a try; you might cotton to it.

Where’s It Playing? Lamb puts on its overcoat and wellies one hoof at a time and trots over in theaters October 8th.

Trailer:

Read The Full Article Here


trick photography
A Must-Have – Hollywood Life
A Must-Have – Hollywood Life
Here's An Update On Cassie Ventura Amid Diddy's Arrest And His Three-Count Indictment
Here's An Update On Cassie Ventura Amid Diddy's Arrest And His Three-Count Indictment
Taylor Swift Is Ready for ‘Next Era’ of Life Post-Tour With Travis Kelce
Taylor Swift Is Ready for ‘Next Era’ of Life Post-Tour With Travis Kelce
Final Message Before Implosion – Hollywood Life
Final Message Before Implosion – Hollywood Life
Witness the Epic Conclusion on Netflix This December
Witness the Epic Conclusion on Netflix This December
Inside Atlas Cinema, the space democratising film exhibition
Inside Atlas Cinema, the space democratising film exhibition
What Happened to Brittney Griner? WNBA Ejection Explained
What Happened to Brittney Griner? WNBA Ejection Explained
Everything You Need to Know Before ‘Agatha All Along’
Everything You Need to Know Before ‘Agatha All Along’
The Ark Season 2 Episode 10 Review: It Should Have Been You
The Ark Season 2 Episode 10 Review: It Should Have Been You
‘Jeopardy’ Champ’s Winning Streak Ends After Brutal Daily Double Loss
‘Jeopardy’ Champ’s Winning Streak Ends After Brutal Daily Double Loss
High Potential Season 1 Episode 1 Review
High Potential Season 1 Episode 1 Review
Ryan Seacrest Gently Nudges ‘Wheel of Fortune’ Player to Not Make Costly Mistake
Ryan Seacrest Gently Nudges ‘Wheel of Fortune’ Player to Not Make Costly Mistake
Lady Gaga on Not Refuting Early Rumors She Was a Man: ‘Kind of Funny’
Lady Gaga on Not Refuting Early Rumors She Was a Man: ‘Kind of Funny’
D.I.O: The New Hip Hop Artist on the Atlantic City and Tampa Music Scenes
D.I.O: The New Hip Hop Artist on the Atlantic City and Tampa Music Scenes
Shavo Odadjian Explains Why He’s So Happy With His New Band
Shavo Odadjian Explains Why He’s So Happy With His New Band
Charlie Hunnam Cast As Ed Gein in Netflix’s Monster
Charlie Hunnam Cast As Ed Gein in Netflix’s Monster
What a Haunted Camper Has to Do with Solving a “Kooky Mystery” or Two
What a Haunted Camper Has to Do with Solving a “Kooky Mystery” or Two
No Preview
Darling Girls: Recap, Chapter Summary & Spoilers
New Mystery and Thriller Books to Read | September 17
New Mystery and Thriller Books to Read | September 17
The 2024 Booker Prize Shortlist, Must-Read Indigenous Nonfiction, and More
The 2024 Booker Prize Shortlist, Must-Read Indigenous Nonfiction, and More
Barefoot Dreams CozyChic Robe Review With Photos
Barefoot Dreams CozyChic Robe Review With Photos
The Best Olly Wellness Supplements
The Best Olly Wellness Supplements
The Best Fall Wedding Guest Dresses
The Best Fall Wedding Guest Dresses
30 Fashion and Home Finds on This Editor’s Fall Wish List
30 Fashion and Home Finds on This Editor’s Fall Wish List
Kate Hudson & Kaia Gerber On Extreme Beauty Horrors [Interview]
Kate Hudson & Kaia Gerber On Extreme Beauty Horrors [Interview]
Silver Scream Con 3: A Major Bloody Success
Silver Scream Con 3: A Major Bloody Success
Prohibition Productions Launches Crowdfunding Campaign for New Documentary “Making Horror: Conventions and Filmmaking Revealed”
Prohibition Productions Launches Crowdfunding Campaign for New Documentary “Making Horror: Conventions and Filmmaking Revealed”
Cuckoo (2024) – Pelicula de Terror ⋆
Cuckoo (2024) – Pelicula de Terror ⋆