(Canada, 83 min.)
Dir. Audrey Cummings, Writ. Chris Gamble
Starring: Alysa King, Samora Smallwood, Bart Rochon, Aaron Chartrand,
Madison Ferguson, Christophe Gallander, Robert Nolan
When the little pig saw what the wolf was about, he hung on the pot full of water, made up a blazing fire, and, just as the wolf was coming down, took off the cover, and in fell the wolf; so the little pig put on the cover again in an instant, boiled him up, and ate him for supper, and lived happy ever afterwards.
-The Three Little Pigs
Writer Chris Gamble has a sense of humour. Berkshire County has three little pigs and a big bad wolf, but the ‘blow’ isn’t something that one reads in a kid’s book. That stuff’s for older kids and, as Berkshire County’s Kylie (Alysa Kings) observes, high school years are when monsters come out of the closet. Berkshire County inverts the tale of the three little pigs and turns the tables of their chinny-chin-chins. It’s a tense and terrifying fable.
A nursery rhyme might not ready lend itself to fellatio, yet
the proverbial blow of this three little pigs tale happens when Kylie gets
drunk at a party and reluctantly lets Marcus (Aaron Chartrand) coerce her into
going down on him. Marcus, ever the perv, films the whole thing with his phone
POV style. Amidst the huffing and puffing rests another pig, lurking outside
the window with a camera of its own. Kylie’s next day at school, needless to
say, is awful.
If high school is horrible then what happens to Kylie on
that Halloween night is a true nightmare. Berkshire
County puts Kylie in peril when she escapes her jeering peers to go
babysitting at a mansion the country and three trick-or-treaters in You’re Next masks show up and put Kylie
through hell. These three pig-masked assailants have a thirst for blood that
can’t be slaked: they’ll bash into the big brick house with a bigger puff than
any wolf could muster.
Berkshire County
creates some genuine thrills with its mostly straightforward account of the
babysitter-in-danger narrative à la Halloween,
but it remains consistently tense and suspenseful as Kylie outsmarts the pigs. Like
a good nursery rhyme, Berkshire County
makes its point quick and cleanly. Director Audrey Cummings knows that a better
horror film is one that delivers a fast, solid punch, and Berkshire County gives one to the gut. The director uses the space
of the large, yet labyrinthine house effectively with perspective and negative
space providing more chills than blood or violence ever could thanks to the
moody atmosphere she creates with DP Michael Jari Davidson. The few splashes of
gore in Berkshire County are a quick,
fleeting spatter, for the film rests more on psychological horror than on pure
visceral bloodsport.
Berkshire County offers
no explanation for the terror that the three pigs—a dad, a mommy, and a
piglet—wreak on Kiley and the two kids in her care. The film offers no
motivation for the assailants to put pork on their forks as they butcher cops
and kids who stand in their way. Their attack shrewdly parallels the senseless
exploitation that Kiley faces earlier in the film, for her classmates never
explain why they videotape her in engaging a sexual act, nor do they have to describe
their reason for uploading the film to the Internet. The script gradually
re-introduces Kiley’s first victimization as she tries to escape the other, and
the question of whether the attack is retribution for her first transgression
lingers above this rape culture fable.
Berkshire County
puts our heroine through hell as this intense film moves breathlessly through action and
suspense. Winters offers an impressive performance as Kylie confronts her own
self-doubts and limitations during the night of terror. Partly a Canadian
answer to Laurie Strode and partly a sister of other new takes on women in
horror, Kylie is a strong, smart, and resourceful character. She’s a fighter,
not a victim, even when all the odds are stacked against her, and she handily
plays the wolf to the three little pigs trying to get in. When Kylie finally
bares her teeth, Berkshire County howls
hello to an exciting new entry in Canadian horror.
Rating: ★★★½ (out of ★★★★★)
Berkshire County has a sneak peek as part of the Canadian Indie Film Series in
select Landmark Cinemas on Wednesday, June 3. (It screens in Ottawa at Kanata.)
It opens theatrically
on June 5 at Landmark Kanata, the Carlton Cinema in Toronto,
and Landmark 24 Whitby.