The Falling
Dir: Carol Morley
2014
****
While Carol Morley’s brilliant Dreams
of a Life was largely dramatized, this is her first venture out of documentary
and into fictional drama and it’s a bold one. I expected a Picnic at Hanging
Rock type affair but The Falling was much more like a Nicolas Roeg picture,
without wanting to take anything away from Morley. I thought the film started
rather slowly at first but I now realise this was all part of the clever setup,
and what might have seemed a little dull, soon becomes riveting and I being
enveloped in its mystery and otherworldliness. There is an eerie resonance
about the film that makes it rather unique. The story is set in an all-girls
school in 1969, two friends, Abigail and her best friend Lydia, are
inseparable. Abigail is the beautiful one, with classic long blonde hair and
blue eyes, she is seemingly perfect and Lydia is a little besotted with her and
jealous of anyone else who gets close. Lydia lives with her brother and
agoraphobic mother, whom largely ignores her. When Abigail becomes sexually
active, Lydia becomes even more fixated with her and is there to confide in
when Abigail realises that she’s pregnant. Abigail keeps the pregnancy secret
from everyone but Lydia, until another girl overhears and she ends up telling
everyone, much to Lydia’s jealousy. Then, one lively night at Lydia’s, both
girls are having fun with Lydia’s brother Kenneth when he convinces Abigail
that sexual penetration might work to terminate the baby, much to Lydia’s
disappointment. Over the next few weeks Abigail becomes ill and faints several
times at school, which makes the teachers suspicious. Abigail is reprimanded by
the faculty more than the other girls due to her short skirts and the clear
indication she’s developing faster. During an evening detention, Abigail
collapses and dies in one of her teacher’s arms and Lydia is left in shock. The
rest of the film thereafter is a fascinating look at adolescent girls in
groups, the hierarchy in groups, competitive jealousy and what it can lead to.
It’s the best representation of hysteria I have seen in film, approaching the
subject with something of a supernatural feel while also showing it for what it
is. It keeps you guessing without ever trying to fool the audience. It gets
pretty dark in place, particularly when, in mimicking Abigail’s life and
actions, Lydia becomes affectionate with her own brother. It’s particularly
eerie when others continue the bizarre behaviour of Lydia, without anyone
knowing of Lydia’s dark secret, which only her mother is aware of. On retrospect
I wondered whether there was too much happening in the story and whether the
ending really needed the stark conclusion, but I think it works. The acting is
of a high standard, although watching Maisie Williams continuously faint was
quite amusing, when it really shouldn’t have been. It’s a wonderfully layered
film that I think plays with the audiences differing perception. It’s
incredibly engrossing and often uncomfortable to watch, but impossible to look
away from. The narrative style switches seamlessly halfway through the film,
then again later on in the film, in a way that just shouldn’t work, but it
does. It’s a remarkable from a film maker’s perspective, even if the story
itself doesn’t appeal. I found it to be an unexpected delight, a theatrical phantasy
but totally believable. It’s definitely a love or hate film, but one I think
everyone can see something of quality in. I think Morley’s venture into
fictional drama is a long time coming, I was captivated throughout.
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