Elizabeth Blue (2017)
A young woman, recently released from a mental hospital, is coping with ongoing episodes of schizophrenia.
Director:
Vincent SabellaStars:
Country:
USALanguage:
EnglishRelease Date:
16 February 2017 (USA) See more »Also Known As:
Elizabeth Blue See more »Company Credits
Technical Specs
Runtime:
Color:
ColorAnna Schafer plays a young woman suffering from schizophrenia in Vincent Sabella's debut feature.
A palpable authenticity permeates Vincent Sabella’s debut feature
about a young woman suffering from schizophrenia. The
director/co-screenwriter, who suffers from the condition himself, based
the film on his own experiences when his medications failed to work. His
portrait of the title character of Elizabeth Blue thus feels all too real in terms of depicting her suffering and confusion.
Unfortunately, that in itself doesn’t make it a fully successful
film. Despite Anna Schafer’s gripping performance in the lead role, this
deeply personal effort is too narratively sluggish to sustain
attention.
At the story’s beginning, Elizabeth is released from a mental
hospital and returns to the Los Angeles apartment she shares with her
hunky, emotionally supportive boyfriend, Grant (Ryan Vincent). She also
begins seeing a new psychiatrist, Dr. Bowman (Adewale Akinnuoye-Agbaje,
who also executive produced), who puts her on a diet of new medications
that he assures her will prove successful in alleviating her symptoms.
“Mental illness doesn’t need to be treated like a dirty secret,”
Bowman tells her in the quietly comforting tones endemic to cinematic
shrinks.
Unfortunately, Elizabeth finds herself still succumbing to her mental
demons which include a malevolent figure (Christopher Ashman)
encouraging her to kill herself, an imaginary raccoon in her bathroom
and the deafening sound of a roaring train in the middle of the night.
Her concerned doctor experiments with different meds as she becomes
increasingly obsessed with her impending marriage. At one point, her
mother (Kathleen Quinlan) shows up and begins a heated argument in which
she blames Elizabeth’s illness for causing her father to walk out on
the family years many ago.
The film does an excellent job of conveying the hallucinatory effects
of Elizabeth’s condition via sound, photographic and editing effects.
But it’s Schafer who most effectively suggests her character’s tortured
mental state with her physically precise and emotionally committed turn.
This represents Schafer’s first starring role, but it certainly won’t
be her last.
But her efforts are undercut by such tired tropes as her character
too often staring blankly into space or at her own reflection in the
mirror for what seems like minutes at a time. The director’s musical
choices are often painfully heavy-handed, such as Nina Simone’s “Feeling
Good,” a recording which really needs to be given a rest. There’s also a
surprise twist toward the end that won’t be hard to guess for anyone
who’s ever seen a film or television show about someone suffering from
mental illness. The device may have worked fine in a thriller, but it
feels too gimmicky for this drama attempting be a serious examination of
its subject.
Final rating: 8/10 for the genre and 7/10 overall and so the drama about love, passion, and addiction delivers a story which I believe in when though it has its weaknesses.
Thanks for reading and have fun watching movies.
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