Skip to content

I BLAME SOCIETY

Written By:

Rich Cross
society

“No film justifies hurting others, does it?” It’s a stark question that confronts a filmmaker fixated on murder poses in the pitch-black horror comedy I Blame Society. Gillian is a would-be cinematic auteur, pushing back against industry rejections and the ignorance of those that refuse to recognise her talents. She’s matter-of-fact about the obvious solution to her exclusion: she’ll combine her interest in making movies with her commitment to killing those in her life that deserve to die. When Gillian recognises that full-disclosure of her plans risks alarming those around her, she chooses a more secretive path. One that has the advantage of ensuring that both witnesses and critics are silenced.

I Blame Society is an evident labour of love for Gillian Wallace Horvat, who co-writes, directs and takes the kind of leading role which sees her character feature in every scene. Her on-screen representation of her filmmaker-self is unsparingly, delightfully spiteful. Her fictional equivalent is a bullying narcissist who’s devoid of empathy and blind to the needs of others. Some of those working in the real-world film industry might guess her character’s occupation based on that description alone,  but her shocking behaviour is as much a consequence of her frustration with being blocked at every turn as it is a reflection of any innate character flaws.

What makes the film’s macabre comedy work so well is that the character of Gillian is both guileless and completely devoid of moral integrity. The effect of this stark honesty is that everyone who is able to escape her attention runs for their lives, her boyfriend included. Gillian meanwhile ensures that her own life unfolds under the watchful gaze of the camera lens. She frames the intimacies of sex and of murder with the same attentive cinematographer’s eye, narrating the drama as it unfolds.

This is an inventive and highly unusual satire on the celebrity culture of screen media, voyeurism and the business of making movies. As well as having its moments of gore, brutality and callous gallows humour, the film is bursting with meta references to the craft of movie making and the tropes and travesties of horror cinema. “Going meta” can be a mood killer, but thankfully there’s wit and intelligence in the film’s caustic reflections on art and culture.

As the body count rises, Gillian relies on the nihilistic logic of the sociopath to justify her actions. If anything, or anyone, is to blame for the loss of life that her film requires, it’s clearly the obstacles to her success that other people erect. The tiny budget and the need to rely on authentic ‘selfie’ filming motifs, makes the movie feel small scale. But the social critique in I Blame Society is far more scathing, more perceptive and infinitely better crafted than the overwrought crassness of Natural Born Killers: a movie with which it shares many of the same preoccupations.

Release Date: April 19th

Rich Cross

You May Also Like...

Colchester Gets a Midsummer Scream from Black Sunday

Black Sunday Film Festival returns with its annual summer mini-fest Midsummer Scream on Saturday July 18th at Firstsite in Colchester. Alongside a stacked selection of feature presentations and acclaimed short
Read More
armando iannucci to pen script for paddington 4

Armando Iannucci Tapped To Direct PADDINGTON 4

The Thick of It and Veep creator Armando Iannucci is taking on Britain’s favourite marmalade-eating bear, with news that the Scottish comedian will be penning the script for Paddington 4.
Read More
jean grey and cyclops in the season 2 trailer for x-men '97

X-MEN ’97 Season 2 Trailer Sees Mutants Lost In Time

“The X-Men are scattered through time; In the past, from the start of Apocalypse’s reign, to the future, at the height of his rule,” so announces the X-Men ’97 season
Read More
robert de niro in angel heart

ANGEL HEART Series Adaptation To Star Zac Efron

A new adaptation of William Hjortsberg’s 1978 novel Falling Angel, which was famously turned into the Robert De Niro-starring neo-noir horror movie Angel Heart in 1987, is on the way
Read More
robert pattinson plays chris hansen in primetime film about to catch a predator

PRIMETIME Teaser Trailer Sees Robert Pattinson As Chris Hansen

Robert Pattinson loves any excuse to put on a weird voice, and his latest role is no exception: he stars in the new teaser trailer for Primetime, A24’s upcoming film
Read More

BABYLON 5 Heads to LEGEND

The cult sci-fi TV show Babylon 5 is heading back to screens as it lands on LEGEND from June 8th. The show’s synopsis is: Following a war between Earth and
Read More