Inside Movie Review
Inside Review
"Inside" Overview

Rating: NR
2008
Cast and Crew
Director : Julien Maury,Alexandre BustilloProducer : Franck Ribiere,Verane Frediani
Screenwiter : Alexandre Bustillo
Starring : Alysson Paradis,Béatrice Dalle
There won't be an image this year, Gallic or not, that quite compares to the sight
of a black-garmented Béatrice Dalle cutting open the stomach of a pregnant woman with
a pair of knitting scissors as a means of performing an at-home Cesarean section
in Alexandre Bustillo and Julien Maury's wicked Inside.
Opening on a digitally-rendered fetus in the womb being shaken up by a car crash,
directors Bustillo and Maury spend little time with pleasantries. That pregnant woman
in the car is Sarah (Alysson Paradis) and the bloodied-up corpse next to her used
to be her husband Matthieu. Four months later, both baby and mother are miraculously
alive, prepping for an induced labor that will be administered the following day,
Christmas. Hubby's death has left Sarah isolated from her mother and her boss, both
of whom are given the cold shoulder when they offer to spend Christmas Eve with the
mother-to-be. The night is to be spent solely with her black cat and the memory of
Matthieu until that ominous knock on the door invites another guest to the party.
Dressed as if she wandered off of a Tim Burton set, a shadowy woman (Dalle) makes
her way inside despite Sarah's hectic call to the police. Soon enough, every Tom,
Dick, Harry, and Mum who steps into the house is met with the business-end of the
woman's knitting needle or a pair of scissors. Eyes are gouged, heads are blown-off,
genitals are pierced, and Sarah's pregnant stomach gets everything but the guillotine
as the woman rampages to claim Sarah's baby girl as her own.
At an airtight 83 minutes, this crimson-spraying rampage gives irrefutable proof
that France has become a certain presence in the horror genre. Repped by one major
cop-out (2003's High Tension) and one superb creeper (last year's Them), Inside ends up
being France's most definitive statement on modern horror to date. And like Neil
Marshall's The Descent, Bustillo and Maury's visceral nightmare has the intelligence and
complexity to leave the audience guessing. Is the woman an apparition? The harbinger
of Sarah's fear of motherhood? A horrifying actualization of Sarah's baby at adulthood?
The filmmakers eventually provide a simpler answer but are careful not to make it
final.
Shot by Laurent Bares (who's also responsible for Xavier Gens' upcoming gorefest Frontier
(s)) in 35mm, Sarah's house is seen in a haze that suggests a waking night terror while
the dissolving transitions, courtesy of editor Stephane Freess (though largely known
just as "Baxter"), are being splattered against every surface imaginable. Francois-Eudes Chanfr
ault's score, intermittently intrusive but consistently creepy, pulses in feverish
beats along with every visual schism that Bustillo and Maury create. Unlike most
modern horror, Inside refuses to soften its own blows by relying on the sensory shocks
of snappy edits, loud squeals of violin, and the comforts of a sanitized ending.
Here, the fear comes in visual tremors triggered by Bustillo and Maury's stylized
aesthetic. It's pure, unadulterated carnage.
Aka À l'intérieur.
Reviewer: Chris Cabin



