Skip to content

KNIVES AND SKIN [FrightFest 2019]

Written By:

Charlie Allbright
Knives and Skin

DIRECTOR:  JENNIFER REEDER | SCREENPLAY: JENNIFER REEDER | STARRING: RAVEN WHITLEY, TY OLWIN, MARIKA ENGELHARDT

A pretty little majorette stands with her lover against the night sky. He wants her to remove her glasses, but she won’t. She inscribes her mark upon his head before she falls down dead. For once, we can spoil you without spoiling you because the plot is immaterial. The remainder of writer-director Jennifer Reeder’s Knives and Skin dances around what has killed the girl, or rather why.

Knives appears in the mould of, or rather desperately echoes, Twin Peaks. Unlike Lynch’s masterpiece, it’s less a story with a beginning, middle and end (in whatever order), more a series of snapshots as the community spend their time picking each other apart in typical arthouse suburban America while the little rustles of the disappearance fracture the world around them. The girl’s body lies in the bulrushes while her classmates face her empty chair. Gem hues and snatches of occasionally poetry add to the Lynchian effect, but the idiosyncrasies of Agent Cooper et al flips here into occasional outright surrealism where the CGI budget pops for images announcing the characters’ paranoia and guilt. In a gloriously bizarre sequence, a t-shirt logo outdoes its own dime-store iconicity. It really shouldn’t work, but manages because the acting is pitched between exaggeration-as-metaphor and the believably strung-out of munching uppers, downers and weight pills like Polos.

The cast are so uniformly excellent, with Marika Engelhardt as the distraught mother and (an underused) Marilyn Dodds Frank as one of the community’s few genuine individuals. Special mention should go to choir sequences that recall all from The Wicker Man to Chilling Adventures of Sabrina in demonstrating peer groups and attempts to communicate across community boundaries. The costumes mix impressively wearable cyberpunk for the kids who want to change their landscapes and a level of drab your average teenager probably wouldn’t brook for those who feel they are doomed.

The problem is it gets carried away with itself. It feels incredibly long and the cast’s number means you’re hard pushed to note what has happened and for whom. Furthermore, despite its diverse actors discussing gender, sexuality, appropriate conduct, and fractured families, it follows in the shadow of a million other features. At one point even those piercing choir sequences devolve into endless interlaced a cappella-singing, floating faces, veering dangerously from American Beauty to the lovelorn twee of High School Musical.

Knives and Skin is a visually fascinating and beautifully acted evocation of loss in a place whose values are changing. However, it is several films in one, with the confusion and running time to match.

Charlie Allbright

You May Also Like...

Survival Horror PITFALL Heading to Blu-ray and DVD

Following the success on digital platforms, the survival horror Pitfall will be released on Blu-ray and DVD in the UK on July 20th from Dazzler Media. Synopsis:  After a young
Read More
guests fantastic films

First Guests Announced for Festival of Fantastic Films

The wonderful Festival of Fantastic Films, which takes place in October in Manchester, has announced the first guests for the 2026 event. Appearing at the festival will be Susan Penhaligan,
Read More

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