Thursday, October 17, 2019

Confusion reigns in beguiling Lighthouse

Willem Dafoe and Robert Pattinson in The Lighthouse. Image courtesy A24.
Reality is at best a concept in The Lighthouse. The film sees it as a thing that possibly exists, perhaps a baseline for comparing behavior, then tosses gasoline onto that otherwise intangible possibility and lights it ablaze. Because, ultimately, whether or not its protagonist can differentiate between what is real and what is in his imagination is irrelevant. Just searching for that dividing line between them is a horrifying, dangerous endeavor that consumes even the sturdiest of souls. 

The Lighthouse stars Robert Pattinson as Ephraim Winslow, a young lighthouse keeper apprenticing under the boisterous Tom Wake (Willem Dafoe). The two must spend a month tending a lighthouse on an island somewhere in New England, with Winslow stuck doing the grunt work for Wake as Wake tends to the light. They survive the month alone, but a massive storm delays their transport off the island. Time becomes impossible to track for Winslow, who begins seeing strange things around the lighthouse, including some rather odd behavior from the mysterious Wake.

Perhaps Wake is not acting so strangely, which he brings up to call out Winslow's loss of sanity. Or Winslow is perceiving the situation correctly; there are odd things afoot on this island and the secret lies in the light. What is clear is Winslow's perspective is unreliable, which puts the audience in a similarly foggy place. Director Robert Eggers (who wrote the film with his brother Max) prefers to keep the audience in the dark, showing Winslow as a hard and dedicated worker, only to tell that he is a drunken, lazy oaf unworthy of trust. What The Lighthouse shows and what it tells are fascinating contrasts that cause the mind to do breakdown a little as it tries to process this conundrum. And it doesn't really matter, because Eggers' focus is on the chaos wrought by isolation and paranoia. Lying underneath every moment is a layer of tension waiting to burst, with Winslow and Wake perpetually a wrong comment or valve release away from snapping. Eggers uses the sound of the lighthouse and the island as a means of increasing that tension, bumping the volume of the diegetic noises to perhaps tease at a slip in control of reality for Winslow. The island is too small to escape from the noises, creating a sense of dread and terror. 
 
The only thing Winslow can rely on is his stormy relationship with Wake. Once the film enters act two and the liquor begins to flow The Lighthouse shifts into a relationship drama between Winslow and Wake. They spend much of the second act oscillating between friendship and fighting, affection and outright hatred, both attracted and reviled by the existence of the other. The most intense moments from The Lighthouse come following the moments of sweetness. Winslow and Wake open themselves up emotionally – Winslow by revealing a dark secret, Wake by showing vulnerability when Winslow derides his culinary skills – and inevitably the other finds a way to utterly decimate the other's feelings. Each feels betrayed by the only one they care about, the cruelty of their words heightening the film's intensity and providing justification for the vitriol they spew at one another. Invectives thrown by a stranger cause minimal harm, but harsh words from a loved one cut to the core of one's being. This is by far the funniest part of the film as well. Pattinson and Defoe have a fascinating patter and ramp up the tenderness and vitriol, with Eggers' script adding nice touches of era-appropriate verbiage. 

The relationship between Winslow and Wake ultimately falls apart as most relationships do when neither person can trust the other wholesale. All Winslow can do is search for the truth about the island and what Wake does at the lighthouse alone at night. Winslow seeks the light desperately, hoping its secrets can reveal some truth about the island. The Lighthouse takes elements of a few myths of the sea along with some Greek stories that serve as an omen for the lost Winslow. Ultimately Winslow's quest for knowledge becomes his downfall, suffering a fate akin to that of the bringer of light onto earth, destroyed by his curiosity and hubris.

Review: Four and a half out of Five Stars

Click here to see the trailer.

Rating: R
Run time: 109 minutes
Genre: Horror

tl;dr

What Worked: Robert Pattinson, Willem Dafoe, tension, humor

What Fell Short: A little too long in the third act

What To Watch As Well: Jacob's Ladder, The Shining

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