52 Films by Women Vol 7. 4. THE INVITATION (Director: Jessica M. Thompson)
Contains spoilers
Incredibly, The Invitation, the email-order bride vampire film (not
hard to work out the twist) is the first film directed by a woman to top the US
Box Office charts in 2022. Admittedly, the weekend of 26-28 August was
described as slow, with audiences insufficiently tempted by Idris Elba as a
Djinn offering Tilda Swinton three wishes in Three Thousand Years of Longing (subtitle: ‘… gives me such a crick in the neck’). An estimated gross of
$7 million doesn’t make it the highest opening film directed by a woman so far
this year – that would be Where
the Crawdads Sing – but it does
show the enduring power of genre. Originally entitled ‘The Bride’ (let’s forget
the Jennifer Beals-Sting movie of the same name) it stars Nathalie Emmanuel as
Evie, a catering assistant and would-be potter hired for swanky launches who
gets to keep a goodie bag. This, gentle reader, is a cautionary tale. You might
think its great to swipe freebies at an awards ceremony or similar, but it
could lead you down a very dark path. For Evie, whose mother had recently died,
and who celebrates her birthday listening to an old voicemail message – stroke
therapy in action – it leads to a submission of DNA to a company called ‘Find
Yourself’ and a date with an over-eager Englishman, Oliver Alexander (Hugh
Skinner), who insists he is her second cousin and invites her (with the aid of
his Air Miles) to the ‘wedding of the century’. He doesn’t mention which
century, but it happens to be the 19th.
Australian-born, Los
Angeles-based director Jessica M. Thompson made her feature debut with the
drama The Light of the Moon, starring Stephanie Beatriz (of Brooklyn Nine-Nine fame) as a woman who denies the impact of an
assault on her, released in 2017. Since then, she has directed six episodes of
the Australian-set television series, The End. Here,
Thompson is working from a script by Blair Butler, who specialises in the
horror-thriller genre, with screenplay credits for Polaroid, Hell Fest and America’s Next Top
Zombie Idol (which sounds like
more of a sketch than a TV special). The Invitation is a
film with one twist: Evie is not just a guest at a wedding to a vampire, she is
also the bride. Cue response: ‘then what?’
The film begins with
a sequence that broadly earns it a PG-13 certificate. How do you commit suicide
in an old house if you have supernatural flying abilities? You take an
alabaster bust before you throw yourself over a balcony with a noose around
your neck to give yourself extra neck-cricking weight. It does mean that
Thompson shows the bust smashing on the floor below rather than a neck being
broken, which is a novelty of a sort. Before killing herself, the woman
complains of having had enough. Immortality is not all it smashed up to be. Nor
is being the third wife – and a fourth wheel.
Now the basic rule
of predatory vampire films – as opposed to Blade – is that you
have to feature a handsome Caucasian, a sort of Britain’s top model; he sports
suits, swimwear and capes, but not all at the same time because that would
resemble a superhero. Walter (Thomas Doherty) is such a guy. He is unexpectedly
forgiving, has an excellent sense of Evie’s dress size, will keep watch as she
falls asleep and hides his bad habits in the library. The latter isn’t
doom-scrolling on Facebook, as we might expect, but involves feasting on a
maid, each of whom has a number on their collar. Talk about ‘cashier number
two, please’.
The first giveaway
that there is something fundamentally wrong with the film itself is Walter’s
house. It looks nothing like an English country estate, rather a Middle
European yellow and white hidey home. The film was shot in Hungary where such
architecture is excellently preserved. English country homes are poorly
maintained on the outside with dirty brick work and lichen. They do not
resemble fairy tale mansions. Having told Oliver that he had ‘spoiled coach
forever’, Evie, who brings a pot for a gift, makes her first mistake backing
into a maid carrying a box of champagne flutes, which smash on the ground. Her
first response is to help clean up, catching the ire of head butler, Mr Field
(Sean Pertwee). Pertwee is a semi-sight for sore eyes, but then I’m not a fan
of Gotham, in which he appeared as Alfred Pennyworth,
Bruce Wayne’s faithful servant. I haven’t seen him in a film for years; he can
easily pass for his father, the late Jon Pertwee, who played Doctor Who back when the title character had a vintage
motor car. (They bring back the Daleks and Cybermen but resist the hot wheels.)
Mr Field is one of those censorious head butlers who mistakes Evie for hired
help rather than a VIP. Having been corrected by Walter, he then explains that
every room in the house is open to her, except the library, which is
‘undergoing renovation’. But where are the men in hard hats?
The formally
identified bride and groom are conspicuous for their absence, but Evie meets
two of the bridesmaids, brunette Viktoria (Stephanie Corneliussen) and blonde
Lucy (Alana Boden). Viktoria is superior and super-serious whilst Lucy is
friendly. She’s never been abroad, much less watched cable television. Evie is
also allocated her own maid, Mrs Swift (Carol Ann Crawford) who shows her the
cord to summon assistance but asks her sternly not to ring it in vain. The
bell, one of several in a row, makes her shudder.
To underscore the
danger that looms for Evie, the five maids are lined up together. One of them
is chosen to clean the library. A drawer opens to reveal a key. It is turned in
a lock. The maid makes an unpleasant discovery that will take more than Lemon
Pledge to correct. In another scene, two maids are sent by Mr Field to fetch a
bottle of wine that dates back to 1787. He locks the gated door behind him.
Something unpleasant awaits them, and it isn’t wine from 1786.
There are creepy
sounds in Evie’s bedroom. She hides under the bed and then is dragged from
under it by friendly Walter. It is at this point that he offers to watch her sleep.
Evie, who is genuinely flirtatious, expects him to sleep with her but he does
not do so, being the all too perfect gentleman.
The film’s most
suspenseful sequence is Evie’s spa day in which she and Lucy have their nails
attended to while Viktoria disrobes and dives into the pool. As Evie converses
with the two women, her nails are snipped. Inevitably, a comment from Viktoria
turns Evie’s head and blood is drawn. Viktoria is keen to attend to Evie’s
bleeding finger – well, she would – but Evie is spared additional blood loss.
Throughout, Evie video
calls fellow catering assistant and best pal, Grace (Courtney Taylor), to
connect to the film’s core audience of knowledgeable young women who have been
waiting for the female equivalent of Get Out. Zingers
don’t exactly fly.
Inevitably, the film builds to Evie investigating the
library to find a print-out of her ‘Find Yourself’ application. That and a
maid’s body. ‘I wasn’t a surprise guest. You knew who I was all along,’ she
tells Walter. ‘I couldn’t invite just anyone to my house without checking
whether they have a criminal record,’ he explains before Evie is seized and
locked into an upright coffin. ‘There are some misconceptions about us,’ Lucy
informs her brightly, implying vampires can go out in the day.
Lucy is seated at a pre-nuptial dinner, where the guests are
elderly and masked. It turns out that if Walter remains without a third wife,
his power – and the livelihood of the surrounding community – will perish.
That’s just rich person gaslighting; there is a lot of that in the UK at
present. Each diner makes a two-finger salute (not the rude one), pointing
towards their lips. Another maid is sacrificed at table, the blood from her
neck filling a bowl. With Mrs Swift’s help – ‘I accept my fate’ – Evie flees
but the old lady and gentleman in whose house she seeks refuge, one of whom is
called Harker, aren’t exactly hospitable. Evie is offered camomile tea, which
is a very bad sign indeed (it is associated with the two maids of honour). She
loses consciousness.
In the finale, Walter shares his blood with Evie, turning her
into a super-fighter with the prowess of the Dothraki (Emmanuel made her name
on Game of Thrones). There is the inevitable
woman-on-woman fight sequence, Evie verses Viktoria, but Lucy proves
unexpectedly helpful. Friend and foe feature in a double impalement.
Inevitably, Evie confronts Walter. The charming Englishman gets his comeuppance
in fire. In a post-script, a conversation takes place between men sent to an
Alexander business address to eliminate all trace of Walter’s plan. Evie and
Grace stand outside, ready to take them on.
The audience with whom I saw the film fidgeted throughout.
There were no gasps at the jump scares or laughter. Horror enthusiasts are way
too ahead of the film to enjoy it. Instead, they cross their arms and ask,
‘yes, and?’ Viewers are better off renting a film of the same name directed by
Karyn Kusama, also featured in this series. However, its modest success means
that Thompson may at least get another film to direct.
Reviewed at Cineworld Leicester Square Screen Five,
Thursday 25 August 2022, 19:30 ‘Unlimited’ preview screening
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