I didn’t care for this film, but it made me very interested
to read the book at some point. This is
a movie that’s clearly intended to give us a sense of ambiguity. Either there’s a vampire, or our narrator is
crazy. That works when you’re reading
from a diary, but it’s quite another thing when we watch a girl walk through
solid glass. You can say that the film
was only showing us what was in the head of our protagonist, but it’s harder to
accept when we were shown a visual image.
Rebecca (Sarah Bolger) is a student at a boarding
school. She was sent there after her
father committed suicide a few years earlier, and she continues to struggle
with the loss. However, she’s begun to
find solace in her friends, most of all her roommate Lucy (Sarah Gadon). Into this mix, however, comes Ernessa (Lily
Cole), a mysterious girl who seems to quickly ingratiate herself to Rebecca’s
friend group, and grows especially close to Lucy.
Coincidentally, Rebecca’s literature class is reading Carmilla
that semester (in fact, the short book seems to be the only thing they
study in the entire semester), and she starts to suspect that Ernessa may be a
vampire. She doesn’t speak this out loud,
but the idea of “Lucy” being targeted makes the concern obvious for any horror
fan long before Rebecca even vocalizes it.
I complained earlier about the film showing us Ernessa
walking through glass. To its credit,
the film is successful in making many of the other scenes ambiguous. One or two could be written off as dreams, if
not outright hallucinations. Also, the
only time we witness an “attack” on Lucy could be viewed as a shadowed sex
scene.
Aside from Lucy drawing further and further away from her,
Rebecca finds herself isolated from her other friends as well. One (Valerie Tian) is expelled for throwing a
chair out of her bedroom window while high.
Another (Melissa Farman) either committed suicide, fell out her bedroom
window by accident, or was killed by Ernessa.
As Lucy grows sick, Rebecca finds herself completely alone.
As for Ernessa, at minimum she is peculiar. She seems to hate water, like looking through
windows, never eats, and walks around the school grounds barefoot in the middle
of the night. She claims that her father
killed himself as well, but she “inherited everything from him.” A major portion of the vampire mythology, or
at least the version that Rebecca comes to accept, is that vampires are created
by committing suicide while alone, and thus she believes Ernessa attempted to
end her own life like her father.
Obviously, this could be interpreted as projection. Rebecca keeps the razor her father killed
himself with in her diary, and contemplates ending her own life. The idea that she’d become a powerful immortal
seems to make this idea somewhat easier for her to tolerate.
Lucy’s illness begins with her isolation from her other
friends. First, she shows the same lack
of appetite as Ernessa. One night, after
Rebecca witnesses what appears to be the attack, Lucy is suddenly sent to a
hospital and isolated from everyone except Ernessa, who Lucy asks to see,
further angering Rebecca. After she
takes a turn for the worst even Ernessa is cut off from her, and Lucy makes a
sudden recovery.
With that point in the film, either the supernatural becomes
even more overt, or Rebecca completely snaps.
Reunited, Rebecca witnesses Lucy and Ernessa disappear into a cloud of
moths on the school grounds one night, but moments later Lucy’s dead body
reappears. After mourning her friend,
Rebecca sneaks into the school basement, and discovers a journal in which
Ernessa confesses how she became a vampire a century earlier. On her second trip to the basement she finds
Ernessa sleeping in a coffin, and lights her on fire.
We end the film with Rebecca being taken by the police to
explain why she set her school’s basement on fire. However, she is now content that Ernessa is
at peace. I think I would prefer the
interpretation of madness, honestly, but as I said before it’s harder to accept
that when my brain has witnessed the supernatural events directly. So, the film is a bit harder for me to
stomach.
I don’t really dislike this movie, though. It has plenty of good points. It also succeeds in creating a somber
atmosphere, without creating soulless or uninteresting characters. I guess I shouldn’t recommend the book if I
have yet to read it, so I’ll simply say that I suspect I would recommend the
book if I had read it.
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