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8/13/2013

The Possession (2012) - Bornedal's possession horror struggles with the demon of mediocrity



A swarm of moths seems to come out of a girl's mouth on this gnarly poster for Ole Bornedal's The Possession

A recently divorce-stricken family contract a grave problem, when a box bought at a yard sale turns out to be a Jewish dybbuk box harboring an evil spirit.

People see movies like The Possession for a variety of reasons. When it ran in theaters, some people told me they had laughed their way through it. Despite it being disrespectful to the fellow audience members and the people that made the movie, - but what is most critical for the filmmakers, I reckon, is that they still went and saw it, - in substantial numbers, actually, - and so their derisive, impolite laughter may not count for much in the end.
The trailer for The Possession is great, which you can see below, and that might have contributed immensely to its success, because it has some central drawbacks:
1. Possession has no real stars: Jeffrey Dean Morgan (They Came Together (2014)) and Kyra Sedgwick (Behind the Red Door (2003)) might be familiar enough faces, but they don't count as actual stars in my book. Furthermore, they both play their parts woodenly at times. 
2. The plot of the film is not terribly original to say the least. The backside to the trailer is that it pretty much tells the entire narrative of the movie, which therefore gets to feel like a drawn out trailer, - which no film aims to do.
Writing team Juliet Snowden and Stiles White (Oujia (2014), both), who based their script on an article by Leslie Gornstein, don't succeed in adding to the possession horror subgenre that they have explained that they endeavored into as fans of William Friedkin's classic horror masterpiece The Exorcist (1973). The provocations and sophistication of that movie don't linger in The Possession, where certain scenes are almost laughable in the way they seem to talk down to their audience, SPOILER as when the distressed father seeks out a room full of wise, bearded Jews to explain the evil box, and they all walk in different directions in instant fright, when he mentions it. Or when the girl stabs her father in the hand with a fork without there being any consequences, reproach or nothing.
The grip on horror here could also be tighter, SPOILER as when the savior-Jew screams continuously at the demon, (which isn't scary), or a teacher is thrown out a window, (which in the genre's context is simply an inadequate death.) William Peter Blatty's (Gunn (1967)) script for The Exorcist was something else, and that is just one of the reasons why that is a great movie, and The Possession is a mediocre one.
The ideas in The Possession which do seem fresh is its focus on a divorce dilemma, wherein everything gets blamed on the dad, and the women with their veganism and other modern ideas such as 'seeing someone' (that is, psychiatrists) continually prove to be very wrong and idiotic. It is all in vein of the fundamentally - mostly - conservative genre of horror. - Nothing modern is of any use against ancient demons, as the genre diehard will know without fail. (Nor should it be.)
The opening announcement of the film, - that the following events took place in 29 days, - have no real meaning or import, besides being a reference to the menstrual cycle, and thus the burgeoning teen-possession also has that rather backwards leg to walk on. (Menstruation equaling freak-out demonism.) Take that as you want.
The extremely simple score by Anton Sanko (Rabbit Hole (2010)) with one recurring note returning again and again works, and the movie, besides its faults, certainly still managed to scare the audience that I saw it with.
The Possession is directed by great Danish filmmaker Ole Bornedal (The Substitute/Vikaren (2007)), who references his own great horror Nattevagten/Nightwatch (1994) in it and has declared that he was drawn to it as an allegory for divorce more than as a horror. And it does seem very intent on its regret/shame/neglect/'the-modern-world-is-crap' focus. Raging out after a personal divorce with a horror movie doesn't result in greatness in this case.(David Cronenberg (Scanners (1981)) did just about the same with his The Brood (1979), which is also more strange and off-putting than really scary in my opinion.)






Director Bornedal and producer Sam Raimi (Spider-Man (2002)) talk about the film at its premiere here

Cost: 14 mil. $
Box office: 85.4 mil. $
= Huge hit (returned 6.1 times its cost]
[The Possession was released 30 August and runs 92 minutes. It is very loosely based on a real story of an allegedly haunted dybbuk box. Shooting took place in 'early 2011' in British Columbia, Canada. Bornedal and Morgan have both related strange occurrences of lights exploding and the props burning five days after shooting in a storage fire. The film opened #1 to a 17.7 mil. $ first weekend in North America, where it stayed #1 for another week, then dropped to #3 and then left the top 5, grossing 49.1 mil. $ (57.5 % of the total gross). The film's 2nd and 3rd biggest markets were the UK with 5.3 mil. $ (6.2 %) and Mexico with 3.8 mil. $ (4.4 %). Roger Ebert gave the film a 3.5/4 star review, translating to two notches higher than this one. Bornedal has kept his career in his native Denmark since the film; he returned with 1864 (2014, miniseries) and theatrically with Small Town Killers/Dræberne fra Nibe (2017). Morgan returned in Red Dawn (2012), Sedgwick in Kill Your Darlings (2013). The Possession is rotten at 40 % with a 5.11/10 critical average at Rotten Tomatoes.]

What do you think of The Possession?
Any personal experiences with a possession or haunting?

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