High Tension Movie Review
High Tension Review

"High Tension" Overview

Rating: R
2003
Cast and Crew
Director : Alexandre AjaProducer : Alexandre Arcady,Robert Benmussa
Screenwiter : Alexandre Aja,Grégory Levasseur
Starring : Cécile De France,Maïwenn,Philippe Nahon,Franck Khalfoun,Andrei Finti,Oana Pellea,Marco Claudiu Pascu
Though he claims it was inspired by the classic ‘70s slasher classics of his
youth, Alexandre Aja’s High Tension is unfortunately as indebted to gimmicky
pseudo-horror flicks like The Sixth Sense and Identity than Last House on the
Left. A serial killer story undone by a lack of terror and a vicious view of
homosexuality, Aja’s film borrows liberally from The Texas Chain Saw Massacre –
including its narrative about a blond woman attempting to escape from a deadly
fiend who, in the final scene, stalks his victim in the woods with a buzz saw –
while failing to properly capture the sheer madness (or underlying
socio-economic anxiety) that made Tobe Hooper’s genre masterpiece pulsate. And
without the scares necessary to sustain its bloody cat-and-mouse tale, this
derivative, mildly nerve-racking thriller – shot in French but partially dubbed
in English for its North American release – finds itself woefully unable to
live up to its boastful title.
Marie (Cécile De France), a closet lesbian with short hair and a sculpted
physique, reluctantly goes to stay with the family of her college pal Alex
(Maïwenn) in their remote country home, a backwoods abode with few ties to
civilization and no neighbors in sight. Alex adores her parents’ new place, but
the friends’ first night in rural seclusion is rudely interrupted by the
appearance of a hulking brute (Philippe Nahon, from Gasper Noe’s I Stand Alone)
who hogties and kidnaps Alex after slaughtering her kin (including her young
brother, who’s unceremoniously gunned down off-screen). Marie, a witness to the
throat-cutting of Alex’s mother from a bedroom closet, manages to conceal her
presence from the intruder, and – after managing to surreptitiously hitch a
ride in his blood-stained van – resolves to rescue her abducted pal and exact
eye-for-an-eye revenge against the mysterious murderer.
Except, disappointingly, that Aja’s film (co-written with Grégory Levasseur)
isn’t what it appears to be. While I’ll refrain from spoiling the climactic
surprise, the director immediately hints at his reality-shifting twist via both
Marie’s introductory dream sequence (in which she remembers that she was
chasing herself) and the killer’s nighttime arrival at the house, which is
intercut with Marie furiously masturbating to the thought of her friend. When
coupled with a puzzling early glimpse of the nameless slayer getting oral
satisfaction (hours before his attack) from a decapitated head, this early
self-gratification scene intends to link woman-on-woman sexual impulses – as
well as the repression of said desire – with bloodthirsty sadism. Yet by making
such a dubious connection, the film not only exhibits a surprisingly
disparaging outlook on same-sex relations as precursors to dangerous psychosis,
but also winds up contradicting its superficial (and initially empowering)
exaltation of strong, retribution-driven femininity.
If High Tension’s equating of homosexuality with homicidal rage is a
disappointing lapse into old-fashioned narrow-mindedness, an inability to
sustain considerable suspense is the film’s fatal flaw. Aja sculpts his set-up
with an eye toward economical chills and plentiful, stylish gore, and the first
third – as well as a deliciously taut moment in a gas station bathroom in which
the typical “killer checking out each stall” progression is upended – has an
unpredictability that lends to the atmosphere of helpless dread. For the most
part, though, there’s a maddening and unavoidable sense that the action is
heading toward an inevitable showdown between Marie and the enigmatic psycho,
meaning that one hardly has to worry much about the protagonist’s fate until
the frustrating finale, which asks us to reevaluate – and encourages us to
re-watch – what’s come before from an entirely new (but nonetheless still
rather dull) perspective. Given how little tension is generated by Aja’s
gruesome film, however, it’s difficult to imagine feeling compelled to suffer a
second-go round.
Aka Haute Tension.
High tension, minimal clothing.
Reviewer: Nicholas Schager



