And now, we get to Backrooms, the film version of the Internet urban legend that Kane Parsons made famous with his YouTube videos. At twenty-years-old, Parsons is now the youngest filmmaker to top the box-office. Want to know more?
What are the Backrooms?
I'll let this anonymous post, from the notorious message board 4Chan, explain what we're dealing with here. It's got a vivid way with words:
If you're not careful and you noclip out of reality in the wrong areas, you'll end up in the Backrooms, where it's nothing but the stink of old, moist carpet, the madness of mono-yellow, the endless background noise of fluorescent lights at maximum hum-buzz, and approximately six hundred million square miles of randomly segmented empty rooms to be trapped in
God save you if you hear something wandering around nearby, because it sure as hell has heard you
And the Technicals?
While the YouTube Backrooms were visualized with Blender, the cinematic ones were visualized on actual sets by production designer Danny Vermette. As the cast walks through them, you’ll share their dread as they anticipate whatever may lurk around the corner. And yet, you’ll be oddly fascinated by this seminal liminal space. The otherworldly images captured by cinematographer Jeremy Cox, even in the real world, will be etched into your mind. An excellent sound team amps up the off-screen violence and electrical ambience rather well. There’s also a perfectly eerie score by Parsons and Edo Van Breemen to set the mood. I’ll talk about the visual effects later …
What about the plot?
In this scenario, concocted by Will Soodik, the Backrooms are found by Clark (Chiwetel Ejiofor), a down-on-his-luck furniture store manager, in his store’s basement. Clark recruits his only two employees, Kat (Lukita Maxwell) and Bobby (Finn Bennett), to help him explore the world beyond his walls. When the quest goes wrong, Dr. Mary Kline (Renate Reinsve), goes down the rabbit hole. He doesn’t want to leave, and there’s something that doesn’t want her to leave.
And the cast?
Ejiofor’s Clark is pretty compelling, but not really likable. At all. Clark practically blames everyone but himself for his impending divorce, and he refuses to change by the end. “That’s how we’re wired,” he puts it. He’s still pretty funny in his store’s cheesy commercials, though. His dog metaphor with the Backrooms is kind of odd, but it makes some sense.
Reinsve’s Mary has her own psychological issues, mainly from her rough childhood with her erratic mother (Krista Kosonen). The screenplay, however, leaves those issues disappointingly unresolved. She’s still compelling, however, as she travels the Backrooms.
Meanwhile, Kat & Bobby are a fun duo, which makes it a shame what happens to them. Mark Duplass shows up as Phil, a researcher with the organization ASync. He’s fine, but Avan Jagia is even better as Naren Warne, an ill-fated colleague in the prologue.
And finally, we come to the Still Lifes, the Backrooms’ distorted recreations of certain humans. While most of them are harmless, Clark’s Still Life, representing himself as his store’s pirate mascot, is the main monster. One can hopefully assume that Robert Bobroczkyi was cast as “Cap’n Clark” specifically for his massive 7’7’’ frame. The CGI augmentations used on him and the other Still Lifes are unbelievably seamless. While we're at it, I can assume that some CGI was used for the deepest parts of the Backrooms.
Should I See It?
You'll have to work out the mechanics of the Backrooms along with its cast. The denouement barely scratches the surface of what it is, which considering all the lore being created for it, is pretty appropriate. This makes it an oddly good starting point for this world. So, yes, it is worth a trip. Unlike the actual movie, safety is guaranteed. I think I've said enough.
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