It's a strange one, this. The first
film to come from Stolen Picture, the new production company created
by Simon Pegg and Nick Frost, Slaughterhouse Rulez
is very much channelling the spirit of the Cornetto Trilogy. Shaun
of the Dead came out a whole
fourteen years ago and the belated third movie The World's
End was back in 2013, and so a
relaunch of the skewed universe of Pegg and Frost is perhaps overdue.
Except
this isn't quite the same thing as the Cornetto films. Edgar Wright
is not involved; Slaughterhouse Rulez is
directed by Crispian Mills, formerly of Kula Shaker, who also
co-wrote the script with Henry Fitzherbert. There are multiple shots
that seem to deliberately reference well-remembered moments from the
trilogy, but while Mills is a skilled director, he hasn't the sketchy
flair of Wright. Credited as executive producers, Pegg and Frost's
fingerprints are all over the script, but this no two-man adventure
for the best buds. In fact, they barely interact during the run of
the film.
No,
this film belongs to the youngsters (I won't say kids, since the cast
are mostly in their twenties, as is traditional for films set in
schools). Set in the fictional country school of Slaughterhouse,
named for its legendary founding by the slaughterer of a monstrous
beast, this is a merciless send-up of the nightmare world of the
British public school system, where children are sent by parents who
either desperately want to better their standing, or simply have more
money than familial love. It's a time honoured institution, where
children are separated from their families and bullied mercilessly by
their elders, earning the right to eventually bully the newbies
should they survive into the Upper Sixth. At least Slaughterhouse
admits girls, which is better than Eton College (although fagging
officially no longer exists in modern public schools, and Eton
employs a lot of female staff – Slaughterhouse only manages to have
two women on its staff, one of whom has already quit and the other,
the terrifying matron played by Jane Stanness, barely seems to
qualify as human).
Young
Don Wallace, played with considerable charm by Peaky
Blinders' Finn Cole, is the
unfortunate kid who gets drafted into Slaughterhouse by his well
meaning mum (Jo Hartley). On the plus side, he shares a room with a
decent chap named Willoughby Blake, played by the excellent Asa
Butterfield (Hugo, The Boy in the Striped Pyjamas),
and takes about ten minutes to fall madly in love with queen of the
school Clemsie Lawrence (Hermione Corfield, terribly posh and all
that). On the downside, he's sleeping in the bed of a boy who
committed suicide, Willoughby insists on calling him Duckie, Clemsie
is the definition of unattainable and the school corridors are
stalked by the psychotic House God Clegg (Tim Rhys Harries –
extremely posh, kind of sexy, utterly terrifying). Clegg wastes no
time in making Don and Willoughby's lives a living hell. Don is the
wrong sort of boy to be allowed into Slaughterhouse, while Willoughby
dirties the school by being gay (public school life being at once
intensely homoerotic and deeply homophobic, because only good
straight boys can wank each other off).
It's about halfway through the film that events lurch into horror mode, as demonic creatures living in caverns beneath the school escape to the overworld and begin noshing on students and teachers alike. The story becomes a race for survival, in which quite a lot of characters bite it, and while the focus is now on fear and desperation, these are actually the funniest scenes of the film. To be honest, the film as a whole isn't that strong as a comedy; there were no moments in the cinema when the audience broke out into a big laugh. It's more a film of little chuckles and sniggers than big belly laughs, but when hell breaks loose, the over-the-top massacre strikes a fine balance of horror and comedy. It's gory, but not too gory, so it stays on the right side of it. The monsters themselves are pretty well designed, although they'll never make it into the horror hall of fame: hairless hellhounds with huge, vicious teeth, sensibly kept mostly in the dark for maximum effect.
The romance between Don and Clemsy is nicely told, and once the horror begins, both their characters really come into their own: Don gets to be properly heroic, and Clemsy gets to be ballsy as hell. (It's always fun to hear a posh girl swearing, although Don can keep Clemsy; genius kickass chessmaster Kay (Isabella Laughland) is the girl for me.) It's Willoughby who's the heart of the story though, living with guilt and heartbreak and almost giving in.
Altogether, Slaughterhouse Rulez is a belting horror adventure, but a qualified success as a comedy. It might have benefited from being less obviously a descendant of the Cornetto films, but without the visibility of Pegg and Frost, would it have got the attention it deserves?
No comments:
Post a Comment