Hereditary
Please, A24:
Take all of my money now,
I’ll see everything.
I’ve said it before and I’ll say it again: for real, everything A24 touches turns to gold. Just whisper those three sweet characters in my ear, and I’m sold. But when it comes to horror movies, I have especially standards because I want so badly to be scared by them but never am. I want to feel the terror, I want the nightmares. The only movie that’s ever delivered on the nightmares is “Changeling,” the 2008 drama starring Angelina Jolie, and it wasn’t even supposed to. That’s my life in a nutshell.
Rest assured, with “Hereditary,” I really, truly felt the terror (and so did the woman screaming behind me), and possibly for the first time ever. How can I be sure? In the last 30 minutes of the movie, I just wanted it to be over because I was so afraid of what might happen next. I’ve never felt like that before, but I loved every second of it.
“Hereditary” is the movie I was most looking forward to this summer, and it’s one I’m going to be thinking about for a long time. There’s so much to unpack, and I already want to see it again. I honestly loved everything about the movie. As most good horror movies are these days, “Hereditary” is a slow burn (so slow that the woman next to me was snoring), lacking the cheap thrills of the jump-out-at-you variety. I tried to go into the movie knowing as little as possible about the plot, but I had heard that Toni Collette is already getting Oscar buzz for her performance, though she may be snubbed a nomination because of the film’s genre. That, to me, is silly, for one because of the success of Get Out last year, but also because of the strength of Hereditary’s story as a family drama. Strip away the scares and there is still a riveting story here; horror elements are just used as a vehicle for deeper meaning, similar to “mother!”, “The Witch” (possibly one of my favorite horror movies ever, also by A24) and “The Babadook.” But unlike “The Babadook,” “Hereditary” doesn’t hit you over the head with its metaphors. I don’t want to spoil anything, but let’s just say the devil is definitely in the details with this one.