REVIEWS
FORUM
US. 2012. 83mins Director/screenplay David Zellner Production company Zellner Bros International International sales Zellner Bros, info@
zellnerbros.com Producer Nathan Zellner Cinematography Nathan Zellner Editor Melba Jordorowsky Production designer Carter Bronson Music The Octopus Project Main cast Sydney Aguirre, Susan Tyrrell, Nathan Zellner, David Zellner
Kid-Thing REVIEWED BY JONATHAN ROMNEY
Backwoods weirdness with a micro-budget pop-art sensibility — it is a risky, volatile formula, but thanks to a compelling child’s-eye focus and a mesmerising pre-teen lead in Sydney Aguirre, Kid-Thing proves a bracingly individual piece from the Texas-based Zellner brothers. The blue-collar rural backdrop and offbeat humour are not so unfamiliar that the result is entirely unclassifiable; you might situate it somewhere on a line between Harmony Korine and David Gordon Green’s bucolic debut George Washington. But Kid-Thing is still idiosyncratic, and this follow-up to their 2008 feature Goliath should raise the profile of the prolific hands-on duo and score some niche sales. Set somewhere in a decidedly unscenic Texas, the film starts
in the realm of downbeat realism, only later veering into more dream-like territory. The heroine is 10-year-old Annie (Aguirre), almost entirely left to her own devices because lunkish dad, farmer Marvin (Zellner) is pretty much a lost cause once he has given his goats their morning feed. The film follows the solitary, sullen Annie while she cycles
round aimlessly, argues with other kids, indulges in a little light shoplifting or blasts cow cadavers with a paintball gun. Annie is trouble through and through — in one deadpan comic scene, she gratuitously demolishes a disabled girl’s birthday cake — and yet she is more likeable than otherwise. It is not surprising that she is a handful given her life at
home, where dad Marvin spends his evenings lounging uproar- iously with equally dopey cohort Caleb (Zellner). Scenes such as this are overstretched, and overplay the freaky-hicksville card, but they also allow Aguirre to display her devastating sang-froid and strength of character by staying formidably poker-faced throughout. Things get stranger when Annie hears a cry for help in the
forest. It comes from a hole in the ground, from a woman named Esther (an unseen Tyrrell), who is desperate for Annie to help her out. But the girl is reluctant, cautiously grilling Esther to be sure she is not the Devil. This bizarre strand, which could be read as a fantasy that Annie indulges in, might have been milked for nerve-wracking tension in a more straightforward drama, but psychological realism is suspended here in the inter- ests of barbed comedy, which is all for the good. With its abrupt curveball ending, Kid-Thing is a peculiar
hybrid — sufficiently realistic to work as a female trailer-trash 400 Blows, casually surreal enough to stray at times closer to art video than to conventional narrative. Nathan Zellner’s crisp, often poetic photography mixes dirty-realist grubbiness with moments of striking lyrical beauty. He also contributes a deli- cately crafted sound design that melds nicely with an eccentri- cally distinctive score from Austin band The Octopus Project.
n 18 Screen International at the Berlinale February 12, 2012
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