Monday, May 11, 2020

1922

Thomas Jane, Molly Parker,
Dylan Schmid

"Your Darkest secrets Never stay Buried"

NETFLIX


This is based on a short story by Stephen King. The horror king, himself. If you are a regular follower of this blog, all three of you :D  You would know I am not a horror movies fan, at all. Yet this was #167 on the Netflix best 250 films article so I was naturally curious. 

Set on a farm in Nebraska in the year 1922, the story is told through the eyes of farmer Wilfred James (Thomas Jane). In a letter, he confessed while he was staying at a hotel that he killed his wife, Arlette (Molly Parker) with the help of his teenage son Henry.

The scenes flick back and forth to his stay in the hotel completely paranoid and also to the time when we get the back story before the murder. Their farm isn't making money at all so Arlette wants to sell her share to another farmer. But Wilfred is a proud man and doesn't approve of her plan. While Arlette was sleeping, Henry holds down his mother as Wilfred tries to decapitate her. Yet she naturally struggles so they end up stabbing her to death. Blood is everywhere. On the bed. Their clothes. The floor. It is a bloody mess, indeed.

Next, they dispose of her body in an old well. The following day as Wilfred peeks into the well, he disgustingly discovers huge rats feasting on Arlette's decomposing body. Together with his son Hank, they decide to push a big cow into the well to cover the stench. 

Bad luck continues as the farm still doesn't make any money. Hank is disillusioned and gets his girlfriend pregnant. They run away as his girlfriend's father is furious. Resorting to a life of crime, the young runaways are miserable. While Wilfred is now haunted by big rats which find their way into the now decrepit house. He sees visions of his dead decomposing wife everywhere. Suffice to say, the film ends on a bleak note with no redemption for the doomed characters. yet I believe they deserved their fate.

So while there are very disturbing scenes of rats infestation and rats feeding on a corpse, 1922 was intriguing enough for me to keep watching. Yet, I cringed every time, those scenes appeared.   The setting is as bleak as the dark and twisted plot. Great performance though from Thomas Jane as the weary farmer. His physical appearance clearly depicted exhaustion from his gravely voice to his wrinkled, fatigued face. As much as the film tried to turn into a psychological thriller, it lacked some depth to fully transform into one. 

Just make sure, you don't watch it before bedtime or else you might have nightmares of rats infesting your bed. Trust me, I did so be warned.

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