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A Girl Walks Home Alone at Night | Blu-Ray Review

A Girl Walks Home Alone at Night Blu-Ray CoverHailed as one of the best new cinematic discoveries in 2014 is director Ana Lily Amirpour with her debut A Girl Walks Home Alone at Night, a moody vampire noir that premiered in the NEXT section at the Sundance Film Festival. Scooping up the Gotham Award’s Bingham Ray Breakthrough Director Award and picking up a pair of Indie Spirit Award nominations (including Best First Feature) and wins at international film fests such as Deauville and Sitges, the film opened theatrically in the fall of 2014 to a barrage of critical acclaim. Credited as the first Iranian Vampire Western, Amirpour is operating with a mash-up of vintage tropes, creating an inspired concoction.

With all its characters speaking Farsi, yet filmed in California and set in the fictional locale of Bad City, there is an enigmatic, surreal aura to Amirpour’s exciting debut. An exploration of loneliness utilizing a set of nighttime creatures while evoking nostalgic cinematic traditions of the film noir and the adolescent rebel, Amirpour’s ambient film is startling in its rendering of expressive black and white cinematography in a film whose themes and sound designs recall the alternate universes of David Lynch.

Living at home with his junkie father (Marshall Manesh), Arash (Arash Marandi) is forced to give up the car he’s finally paid off to Saeed (Dominic Rains), the dealer and pimp to whom Arash’s father owes a large sum of money. Saeed also collects money from his streetwalking employee, Atti (Mozhan Marno), who he treats miserably. Abusing the prostitute, he is observed by a lone young girl (Sheila Vand), who places herself in his orbit in order to receive an invite into his home.

Meanwhile, in a bid to barter for the return of his car, Arash steals some items from a rich client, and visits Saaed at home. He finds the pimp dead, with the bloodstained girl exiting his home. Happy to be able to reclaim his car, as well as a briefcase of goods from Saeed’s that he can now sell, Arash runs into the girl once more, and they share a night of mutual attraction.

A drag queen swirls around with a balloon, evoking, perhaps, Dean Stockwell’s Roy Orbison rendition in Blue Velvet. It’s one of several notable moments in Girl that seems to reference parallels to Lynchian’s otherworld universes, the stark expressionism and black pools of industrial sound design also recalling Eraserhead. But Amirpour has concocted something quite original and unique of her own making. Basically, it’s a love story about two lonely souls coming together amid drowned out suburban decay, streets littered with pimps, prostitutes and struggling addicts.

Neither the titular girl nor her eventual love interest, Arash, is doing anything to better the environment, as they’re also pawns adrift in their own dreary landscape. Sheila Vand sometimes recalls a young Winona Ryder when cloaked in her mascara and hijab, a Goth girl prototype whose only joys are found in her eclectic (some might even say hipster-ish) musical selections. As Arash, relative newcomer Arash Marandi recalls a young Tim Curry styled as James Dean. “Those sad songs sure hit the spot,” he observes after a strangely romantic rendezvous with his new love interest shortly after he pierces her ears with a safety pin so that she may wear his gift of stolen earrings.

As arresting as these two are, culminating in a stunningly rendered moment within the Girl’s bedroom, music blaring, as she decides to listen to his beating heart rather than sink her teeth in his bared neck, Amirpour gets equal mileage from Atti, the prostitute played by Mozhan Marno, an actress many should recognize as the title character from the punishing The Stoning of Soraya M. (2009) as well as the Netflix series “House of Cards.” Here, she’s like a graceful femme fatale transported from the 1950s, a fallen, melancholy woman, whose plight runs parallel to that of the lonely vampire down the way and the unwanted feline no one wants to care for any longer.

More of a feeling and a mood than a definitive story, A Girl Walks Home Alone at Night belongs on a shortlist of modern and effective vampire films, evoking the trials and tribulations of the eternal creatures of the night, beings adrift that no longer remember what it is to want.

Disc Review:

The Blu-ray package of A Girl Walks Home Alone at Night is perhaps the single most impressive release from Kino Lorber to date. Sporting a vibrant cover design and including a collectible graphic novel (which features an essay by Eric Kohn), the excitement for the title is clearly evident, something also reflected in a handful of extra features (including a stills gallery). Presented in 2.35:1 aspect ratio with 5.1 surround sound, Lyle Vincent’s expressive cinematography looks superb in the transfer, while Amirpour’s carefully selected soundtrack sounds as moody here as ever.

Behind-the-Scenes Footage:
Twenty minutes of behind the scenes footage showcases the make-up artist and special effects that went into the making of the film.

Deleted Scenes:
Twenty two minutes worth of deleted scenes are included, several are extra moments shaved off of sequences that did make it into the film.

Q&A Hosted by Roger Corman at the Hammer Museum:
An entertaining Q+A hosted by Roger Corman in January, 2015 lasts about forty-five minutes and is entertaining as Amirpour discusses her attraction to ‘ruin porn’ and decay.

VICE Behind-the-Scenes Documentary:
A twenty minute doc from VICE begins with footage prior to the Sundance NEXT screening of the film in Los Angeles. Producer Elijah Wood discusses his attraction to the film.

VICE Meets Ana Lily Amirpour and Sheila Vand:
A thirty minute interview with Amirpour and lead star Sheila Vand discusses the making of the film.

Final Thoughts:

It’s hard to forget Amirpour’s fictional landscape of Bad City. Blending a dark sense of humor with violence, longing, and the horror genre’s most romantically inclined staple, it is indeed an enigmatic new title that manages the impossible feat of standing out.

Film: ★★★★/☆☆☆☆☆
Disc: ★★★★/☆☆☆☆☆

Los Angeles based Nicholas Bell is IONCINEMA.com's Chief Film Critic and covers film festivals such as Sundance, Berlin, Cannes and TIFF. He is part of the critic groups on Rotten Tomatoes, The Los Angeles Film Critics Association (LAFCA), the Online Film Critics Society (OFCS) and GALECA. His top 3 for 2021: France (Bruno Dumont), Passing (Rebecca Hall) and Nightmare Alley (Guillermo Del Toro). He was a jury member at the 2019 Cleveland International Film Festival.

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