Berberian Sound Studio
Directed: Peter Strickland
Starring: Toby Jones, Cosimo Fusco, Antonio Mancino, and Tonia
Sotiropoulou
The Italian giallo has provided horror with some of the
genre’s most memorable scenes. Names like Fulci, Argento, and Bava are just a
few that have provided their exceptional skill in crafting the look and feel of
the giallo motif. Those paradigms seem to have influenced Director Peter
Strickland as he has composed a film evocative of giallo filmmaking but also
purposed with a dedication to the detailed execution of a structured, element
driven storytelling.
The setting is Italy in the seventies. An awkward, introverted
sound engineer named Gilderoy (Toby Jones) is commissioned to work on a horror
film called the “The Equestrian Vortex”. The director, Santini (Antonio
Mancino), is an intimidating man who berates his crew consistently. Gilderoy
works with Francesco (Cosimo Fusco), another abusive type, on the sound design
for the film. The difficult work environment overwhelms Gilderoy, but more so are
the terrifying and disturbing images he is fashioning the sound for. He becomes
consumed and is lead into a nightmare of confusion.
Berberian Sound Studio
is not your traditional horror film. There is no monster, no gore, and no straightforward
frights. Instead, the film relies heavily on assisting design elements to
forward the story, and slightly survives the monotony of a confounding
narrative by crafting tension with an effective atmosphere and discomfort with
the fantastic use of an ingenious sound scheme. The strong performance by Toby
Jones is also an important detail for a narrative that is light on dialog from
the main character.
Because the film being worked on is never seen, and only
heard, it allows the viewer to connect the sound with some kind of imagery. The
parts of the story that are exposed during Gilderoy’s labor are graphic and
violent in description, which is divulged to the viewer through the use of character
subtitles. This aspect is only further assisted by the necessary sounds being
manipulated by the Foley artists who are shown taking blunt objects to various
melon fruits in one of the scenes. While this isn’t necessarily scary, it’s
still a creative way to allow the sights and sounds Gilderoy is experiencing to
penetrate the thoughts of the viewer watching the film. The facet works until
Gilderoy becomes more affected by the film he is working on, which causes a
never fully explained but implied mental break that blurs the lines of his
reality. This is a difficult execution for the film and ultimately the breaking
point for the narrative; because everything is still implied with assisting
sound and editing elements the final act feels hurried and the viewer is left with
more assumptions than answers.
For those willing to indulge in a slow moving, meticulously
crafted non-traditional horror film, Berberian
Sound Studio is an interesting effort. Toby Jones is good in the lead role
and Peter Strickland displays impressive skill in the directing chair. This is
not a film for everyone, and those looking for a conventional horror film will
be disappointed in the lack of genre attributes. Still, it’s appreciative to
see film attempt at promoting the topic of horror in a different way; whether
or not it’s successful rests in the hands of the fans, but for the most part Berberian Sound Studio achieves.
Monte’s Rating
3.50 out of 5.00
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