Mr Sausage wrote:I always thought the film was structured around, and playing off of, two female archetypes: the black widow, who victimizes men and plays off of fears of female sexual power, and the sexual naif who's victimized by men in a world she doesn't understand and plays off of fears of male sexual power. By themselves, they're cliches, but pairing them like this is interesting. Don't know what to make of it at the moment, but it sure complicates the movie.
A bit late in the reply but having watched it again a few weeks ago and just signed up..
In the first half of the film I personally felt the archetype the film was drawing on was less the femme fatal/black widow(although this is clearly present in the entrapment scenes especially) and more the serial killer/rapist given a switch of gender. The sense of impersonally and calculatingly targeting easy victims I think draws much more from the latter. It seems like an obvious counter to the "she was asking for it" rape defence to me showing its double standard in the male victims having sexual desire yet still being blameless in their fate.
I'd say as well it feels very much like a film who's style flows from its story rather than having it superimposed on it. Firstly showing us an alien viewpoint and then the humanising of that alien in a very slow subtle fashion.
I find personally the aspect of the film that's most enigmatic to be the way it uses its environments, moving between deliberately mundane human settlements and more awe inspiring natural ones. I mean on one level I spose it recreates the experience of visiting the area it takes place in but there seems to be an impact on the character as well. The first shifts towards humanity seem to be hinted at in the beach scene(even if there not acted on) and the scene in the mist is where a definite decision is made to leave the van then after the failed attempt as romance/sex we see the character taking refuge in the mossy woodland with that intercut image of the storm blown trees.