Horror only ever
seems to transcend forgettable fun when it is about something deeper than the
surface-level scares it provides. Films like Midsommar and Pearl have
a feminist bent, commenting on the stifling effects of the patriarchy even as
they thrill audiences, while movies like The Babadook and Hereditary explore
themes of loss and family to chilling effect. Vampires have always been prime
canvases for metaphor, so it will come as no surprise that Ryan Coogler’s Sinners
uses them to tell a story that is deeper than it appears to be on paper. Sure,
blood is let, garlic is munched, and hearts are staked, but Sinners is
really about the power of music, the fear of cultural assimilation, and much
more; but let’s not forget the fact that it is also just very, very good, if
not particularly scary.
As writer,
producer, and director, Ryan Coogler’s fingerprints are all over Sinners, his
first big-budget project that wasn’t based on an existing property, and they
are fingerprints that I hope to see more often. The dialogue is authentic and
believable, and Coogler once again proves that he has a knack not only for
action scenes but also for the quieter, more dramatic ones. The more grounded
first half of Sinners, which is set in Great Depression-era, heavily
segregated Mississippi, is an extended set up for the vampire carnage that
takes place later, but finding out who these characters are and what they’ve
been through is actually more interesting than the supernatural second half,
which is exciting but isn’t quite as engaging.
Much more
interesting than the vampires themselves are what they represent, as well as
the musical qualities and themes that Sinners fully leans into to
beautiful effect. The soundtrack by Ludwig Goransson, as well as the
performance of newcomer Miles Canton, who plays blues prodigy Sammie “Preacher
Boy” Moore, give the film an infectious energy and will leave audiences tapping
their toes even as they fear for the jugulars of the characters (Coogler’s
muse, Michael B. Jordan, pulls double duty as two of the film’s other main
characters, cousins Smoke and Stack, in disparate performances that showcase
his fantastic range, and Hailee Steinfeld also wows as past flame Mary). I
would have been perfectly happy watching a film simply about Preacher Boy’s
journey to become a musician, vampires be damned, but then again if you cut
them an important bit of symbolism would be lost. As I said earlier, here the
blood suckers are stand-ins for cultural assimilation, a fear that joining a
melting pot of people might erase one’s cultural identity, but they also
represent Sammie’s struggle against his father’s wish for him to follow his
footsteps as a preacher.
Sinners isn’t
particularly scary and it isn’t without a corny moment or two, but overall it’s
not just a great vampire film but a great film period.
Sinners is
now playing in theaters.

No comments:
Post a Comment