Skip to main content
Arrow Video: Sleep (2020) - Reviewed
 |
Courtesy of Arrow Films |
German writer-director Michael Venus came out of nowhere in
the late 2000s with three short films before making a most confident feature
film debut with his 2020 psychological horror thriller Schlaf or Sleep
in English. Co-written by Venus with
Thomas Friedrich, the film comes to us from the good folks at Arrow Video who
have put together a deluxe limited edition set, a lot for a first-time director
no one has heard of before. The risk is
worth taking however as Sleep represents a unique new voice in
psychedelic surrealist dream horror which manages to evoke everything from
Bunuel to Lynch to Gilliam through the mold of the psychological thriller.
Marlene (Sandra Huller of Toni Erdmann) is a former
flight attendant suffering recurring dreams involving a mysterious and secluded
hotel she has never been to and proceeds to investigate upon finding out the
hotel in fact exists. Upon arrival she
experiences a nervous breakdown and is committed to a psych ward deprived of
the means to contact her daughter Mona (Gro Swantje Kohlhof) who herself gets
drawn into her mother’s investigation.
Leading her to Stainbach, a utopian village with few residents but many
skeletons lurking in the closet, her search leads her toward a missing woman
named Trude and an elderly couple managing the hotel grounds who may know more
about her disappearance than they’re telling.
Touching on varying sleep states evoking the strange psychosexual
and extremely violent vibes of Vanishing Waves (another dream logic
driven freak out), Sleep is an interesting and picturesque mystery
thriller that starts off slow before kicking the hallucinatory madness into
high gear by repeatedly yanking the rug out from under you. Once you begin to think you have a handle on
what Sleep is going, you find yourself slipping and falling with Mona
into a bottomless rabbit hole through which there may not be a way out.
One of the film’s virtues is the unreliability of both
Marlene and her daughter Mona, leaving ample room for us to buy or disbelieve their
visions as truth or simply insanity. The
film has both characters at one point or another do something aggressively out
of touch with their personality that feels oddly appropriate in the film’s hazy
dream-nightmare logic. Both actresses
Huller and Kohlhof go the full distance for the film’s abrupt tonal and logical
shifts with a conviction reminiscent of Naomi Watts’ and Laura Elena Harring’s
dualistic turns in Lynch’s Mulholland Drive. At the end of the day Sleep begins to
boil down to a more standardized genre thriller…or does it?
Lensed beautifully in lush panoramic widescreen by Marius
von Felbert, the netherworld of Sleep is a visually alluring one to fall
into even when we’re aware that we’re drowning.
Bathed in lush colors interspersed with key sequences of deep shadows
and low light levels, the look of Sleep is integral to the film’s sharp
contrasts between hyperkinetic sensory assault and near audiovisual silence. Sound is equally important to the world of Sleep
with muffled dissonant echoes and electronic abrasions created by composers
Sebastian Damerius and Johannes Lehniger whose eerie soundscape perfectly
compliments the film’s nightmarish imagery.
A fresh new voice in German film featuring two stellar scream
queens, a creepy setting and enough of a hallucinatory grip on reality to
unnerve even the most dedicated consumers of surreal horror, Sleep though
a bit messy here and there is a wonderful addition to the ever-evolving dream
& folk horror hybrid picture. A film
that’s as easy to get lost in as the two heroines trying to navigate their way through
whatever state of mind or place they’re in, Sleep proves to be an
indelible contribution to the ongoing international horror scene and bless the
good folks at Arrow Video for bringing this inspired mean and lean little indie
horror flick to our scare-starved attention!
--Andrew Kotwicki