Green Room
Dir: Jeremy Saulnier
Starring: Anton Yelchin, Imogen Potts, Alia Shawkat, Joe Cole,
Callum Turner, Macon Blair, and Patrick Stewart
We’ve all heard the saying “I was in the wrong place at the
wrong time”. Many have probably fallen
into this situation at least once in their life. I once walked into a surprise
birthday party mere seconds before the birthday person walked in, completely
ruining the surprise. These encounters are most often innocent enough and are
probably shared as bits of small talk or chitchat to engage a conversation. In
Jeremy Saulnier’s film “Green Room” this sentiment takes a cruel turn into
nightmarish territory when a punk rock music group called the Ain’t Rights
encounter a community of White supremacists. Mr. Saulnier exceptionally turns a
simple story into an unflinching and tension-filled demonstration of survival
horror.
Jeremy Saulnier is good at taking characters and placing
them in the middle of terrible situations that they have no control over. The
process for the characters becomes forced action, most often action that
requires the character to commit horrifying acts in order to survive. But what
makes this simple narrative approach so effective is the skill of Mr. Saulnier,
who understands how to manipulate the viewer in inventive ways and make the
viewer feel every emotional moment of the situation the characters are in. In
“Green Room” Mr. Saulnier combines all the successful elements from his
previous films and builds a film that breathes tension and anxiety. Whether the
calm manipulation of a club owner coxing a group of young people into
submission through a locked door or the frantic, pulse-pounding cat and mouse
chase, there are moments that will make you squirm and moments that will push
you to the edge of your seat.
The film works best when gleefully indulging in these
moments, however where Mr. Saulnier stumbled in the past with aspects of
character composition or narrative cohesiveness here the director successfully
compliments these features nicely. There are even small moments of comedic
levity as the band discuss their “stranded-on-a-desert-island” band, a moment
that had a big applause at the screening that I attended after the choice was
made from one of the characters. Things lead to a finale that is less exciting
and somewhat predictable yet still satisfying because of the characters finally
surrender to the situation and embrace their punk rock attitudes.
The film has the help from the very dependable talents of
Anton Yelchin and Alia Shawkat but also some fine moments from Joe Cole and
Callum Turner, these four actors comprise the Ain’t Rights. In a wonderful
casting choice Patrick Stewart plays the villain as club owner Darcy, Mr.
Stewart is calmly menacing and effectively evil throughout the entire film.
“Green Room” is very much the definition of punk. A film
that understands the rules but decides to play by it’s own tune, a fast,
aggressive, and stripped down tune. While the story concerns a group of young
people who are in the wrong place at the wrong time, the film may be an
opposing version of this. It is essentially the right film at the right time amidst
the stale and overused versions of this sort of film; “Green Room” is a
brutally refreshing interpretation.
Monte’s Rating
4.25 out of 5.00
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