Rating summary
Movie | | 5.0 |
Video | | 4.5 |
Audio | | 4.5 |
Extras | | 2.0 |
Overall | | 4.0 |
It Follows Blu-ray Movie Review
"The best Horror movie in years" isn't hyperbole.
Reviewed by Martin Liebman July 2, 2015
Good Horror movies are scare, er, scarce these days, and great ones have practically died, er, disappeared from the scene altogether.
The genre seems to have drifted away from the legitimate thrills and chills of decades past and the superhuman monster craze of the 1980s that
produced some of the genre's most iconic characters to devolve into a nonsensical world of dueling styles with overblown
gross-out gore on one side and watered-down plots to fit the box-office friendly PG-13 realm and lure in those all-important teenage date night
dollars on the other. Director David Robert Mitchell's breakthrough film It Follows defies modern genre conventions with a mesmerizing
Horror masterpiece that takes, shapes, and makes its own the best the genre has to offer and never goes near the worst. Deep psychological
scares, unbearable tension, beautiful photography, good characters, excellent performances, relatable themes, quality music -- everything works in
total, entrancing harmony. This is the total package, an instant classic that should be remembered as one of the great Horror movies of its, or any,
time.
It comes.
Jay (Maika Monroe) has always dreamed of the perfect date, and she's finally on it. An attractive young man named Hugh (Jake Weary) takes her
out on the
town and, later, makes love to her in his parked car near an abandoned warehouse. She's fully satisfied, but he knocks her out. She awakens tied
to a chair. He means her no harm, not personally, anyway. But he has put her life in danger. Through sexual intercourse, he's passed a curse on
to her. Until she passes it along to someone else through sex, someone,
something, will stalk her. Worse, if it kills her, it will move back
to the previous victim, meaning a cursed person's life will never be safe. It moves slow, ambling along almost like a zombie, but it's endlessly
determined and could come in the shape of any person. She quickly realizes that he's not playing games. She works to convince her friends that
the curse is indeed real and goes on the run to buy time and devise a plan of attack against it. But the relentless curse follows her everywhere she
goes, and she'll never be safe again, even if she passes it on to someone else.
Wow.
Wow.
Wow. If ever a movie came along at just the right time to completely reinvigorated a desperate, dying
genre,
this is it.
It Follows demonstrates the beauty of structural simplicity, the elegance of a finely-tuned script, and the benefits of a filmmaker
who not only understands the craft and the genre in which he or she is working but pours an obvious passion for it into the film and works from a
deep knowledge base of what works, what doesn't, and how to best, and most effectively, blend both classic motifs and new ideas into a single,
grand experience. The film embodies the Horror genre at its most superficial basic -- following characters who, by way of sexual activity, are
stalked
by a relentless figure -- and at the same time its most mesmerizingly complex best, complex by way of its outwardly simple yet intoxicatingly
precise,
detailed physical construction and mesmerizing in its perfectly tuned psychological chills that build to an incredibly realized climax. The movie finds
the
perfect balance between pure scares, intense cat-and-mouse games, and dark psychological underpinnings, all without resorting to excess gore
and working on a premise that's admittedly absurd but that plays on a number of levels nonetheless, something that's at once both an allegory of
the dangers of promiscuity and sexually transmitted diseases and, perhaps more apropos to the Horror genre, a unique spin on the old "have sex
and die" crutch that was a genre mainstay plot device and has become something of catch-all definition of classic 80s Horror.
The lifeblood of 80s Horror does indeed run through
It Follows' veins, and
Halloween's DNA courses through every inch of every frame. The film
walks the fine line between imitation and simply using a classic film as a guide. Its premise is similar, essentially the unstoppable boogeyman
coming
after a specific target, but the film also replicates, to perfection,
Halloween's precision timing; adherence to simplicity; and photographical
excellence including thoughtful shot composition and using the frame as not only a story conveyance but a palette on which a more beautiful,
thoughtful, and artful cinematic experience is presented. There's also a number of subtle bits that clearly pay homage to John Carpenter's film;
various shots of
Jay and her friends walking down the street, the camera matching their pace and tracking backwards while in front of them, feel eerily reminiscent
of
similar shots in
Halloween's Haddonfield. A shot in which Jay's assailant approaches her
school will remind audiences of a scene in which Laurie sees Michael outside her school's window. Even that every television in
It Follows
is tuned
to old black-and-white Horror/Sci-Fi films recalls
Halloween's use of
The Thing from Another World as a support tool to tie the
night together.
It Follows may not be
quite as perfect as
Halloween -- John Carpenter's classic is arguably the
greatest Horror film of all time -- but it approaches it in every way, demonstrates its mastery of that film's lessons, and is certainly amongst the
handful of great Horror films to come since.
But it's not just a great script, a quality idea, and a knowledgeable and passionate director that makes a movie work. There are plenty of other
areas of concern that can break even the best material and stymie even the finest filmmaker. Fortunately,
It Follows hits on all cylinders.
The cast is uniformly excellent. They're not challenged to stretch all that far because the script keeps things so gloriously simple, but each of them
-- from Maika Monroe on down the line -- feel completely absorbed in the movie and their characters, buying it entirely and fully on board with
the movie's structure and style, understanding its "less is more" approach and never trying to steal the spotlight but rather take their necessary
place in it. The film is beautifully photographed and edited; D.P. Mike Gioulakis gets everything he can from each location, whether paying homage
to
Halloween in those aforementioned neighborhood exteriors or using interesting environments like an abandoned warehouse and its
adjacent, overgrown parking lot or a poorly lit indoor swimming pool to the film's visual and dramatic advantage alike. Music is terrific, too.
Composer Disasterpeace gives the movie an edgy neovintage vibe that at once both recalls the classic 70s and 80s genre notes while still carrying
its own
uniquely identifiable tone and modern edge about it.
It Follows is a masterpiece in every way that truly must be experienced to believe.
It Follows Blu-ray Movie, Video Quality
It Follows features a gorgeous 1080p transfer. The digital photography never feels glossy or flat, soaking up detail and color and spitting them
back out with practically faultless precision. Image clarity is outstanding. The picture is naturally sharp and the 1080p resolution brings out plenty of
beautifully intricate textures throughout, including brick home façades, grasses and leaves, tile around an indoor swimming pool, and of course basics
like skin textures and clothing lines. Colors are naturally bright and balanced, presenting with eye-popping accuracy but never going too garish or
unrealistically robust. Black levels, critical to several scenes, are deep and satisfying. Skin tones raise no alarms. The picture suffers from no
egregious examples of banding, aliasing, blocking, or other eyesores. This is a terrific transfer in support of an even better movie.
It Follows Blu-ray Movie, Audio Quality
It Follows creeps onto Blu-ray with a spectacular DTS-HD Master Audio 5.1 lossless soundtrack. Music is the big winner here, playing with a
natural, by-design sharpness much of the time that still translates to impeccable clarity on delivery and a full, robustly defined stage in which every
speaker carries a balanced load for a totally immersive experience. Low end support is quality, too, deep and well defined without falling victim to
unwanted rattling or other unkempt results. The track also features several well defined large support effects. Several blasts from a revolver are crisp
and
authoritative, perhaps not quite so deep as they could have been -- particularly a couple of shots fired inside -- but there's nonetheless a nice weighty
feel to them. Driving rains and heavy thunder are likewise naturally replicated and nicely fill out the entire stage. Lighter effects such as natural
environmental ambiance -- chirping birds and singing insects -- are likewise well defined and precisely scattered throughout the listening area.
Dialogue
delivery is clear and center-focused with a nice little bit of reverberation in chapter three.
It Follows Blu-ray Movie, Special Features and Extras
It Follows contains a commentary, a short conversation with the composer, a trailer, and a small image gallery. Inside the Blu-ray case, buyers
will find a voucher for an Ultraviolet digital copy of the film.
- Audio Commentary: Critics Eric D. Snider, Britt Hayes, Samuel D. Zimmerman, Alison Nastasi, Eric Vespe, and Scott
Weinberg discuss the film. Weinberg opens with a rich, insightful monologue, managing to cram in a lot of information into a short amount of time.
Some of the aforementioned participants call in to speak with Weinberg, the first coming around 15 minutes in. It's a little disconcerting but at the
same time a bit unique to hear various sound bytes rather than a single, flowing commentary. Still, the track has plenty to offer by way of shaping a
greater sense of understanding around the film, from the mundane to the deeply insightful. Fans should have no trouble spending an evening with this
track.
- A Conversation with Film Composer Disasterpeace (1080p, 4:56): After a brief introduction to himself and his career, the composer
discusses how he landed the part for It Follows and speaks on the specifics of his music written for the film.
- Theatrical Trailer (1080p, 2:13).
- Poster Art Gallery (1080p): A collection of images created from the hands of a worldwide selection of artists in support of the film's
release.
It Follows Blu-ray Movie, Overall Score and Recommendation
There's not enough praise one can bestow upon It Follows. It's a modern classic that fully understands and embraces everything that's
good about the Horror genre (psychological scares, a refined script, moody photography, a creative yet familiar core idea) and leaves out everything
that isn't (overwhelming/unnecessary gore, cheap jump scares, watered-down details, found footage). Every bit of the production is special.
Everything works. Everything is magic. This is the best Horror film to come along in a long, long time and a film that needs to be at the top of every
movie watcher's must-see list. Anchor Bay's Blu-ray release of It Follows features excellent video and audio. Supplements are few in number
but
satisfying. Very highly recommended.