Cult Gestalt: Marmor Explores Urban Horrors in Efficient Debut
There’s apparently more than one way to define rent control, at least as suggested by David Marmor’s effective and efficient debut, a likeable low-budget horror film 1BR. A notch above the usual American indie horror offerings, Marmor’s narrative is certainly predictable but efficient use of limited locations and calculated performances recalls a variety of arthouse horror icons, particularly Polanski’s celebrated Apartment trilogy (Repulsion; Rosemary’s Baby; The Tenant), at least in its basic themes. A likeable Nicole Brydon Bloom presents a likeable lead performance, which is perhaps assisted by some of the staged ambiguities about her commitment to a new ‘community.’
Sarah (Bloom) has decided to pursue a career in costume design against her father’s wishes. Moving to Los Angeles on a prayer and a dream, she finds immediate solace in an overly welcoming apartment complex, with landlords Jerry (Taylor Nichols) and Janice (Naomi Grossman). She makes immediate friends with the elderly Edie Stanhope (Susan Davis) and shares a flirtation with the handsome boy next door, Brian (Giles Matthey). But then, there’s the creepy, one-eyed Lester (Clayton Hoff) and the fact someone appears to be angry Sarah has brought her feline friend along to live with her. She finds a job as a temp, making a quick friend in the outgoing Lisa (Celeste Sully). Things take a drastic turn for the worse when the apartment complex community reveals they have other intentions for Sarah.
While Sarah’s mental brainwashing could have used a little finesse, Marmor’s inclusion of a Juice Newton cover to play over her ‘branding’ suggests a morbid sense of humor. Like a fascist, urban pocket community akin to the white flight participants in M. Night Shyamalan’s The Village (2004), Marmor explores the inherent fatalism of ‘connection’ at any cost, and creates a likeable sister film to something like Karyn Kusama’s well-staged The Invitation (2015), even utilizing a similar red-light special with which she ends that film.
★★★/☆☆☆☆☆