This British sickie very much fits the definition of what has come to
be termed “Torture Porn.” This means you probably already know if you’ll
enjoy it or not. I admire it a fair amount but have some severe
reservations.
The Package
This 2008 film was made for a reported 100 thousand
pounds (equivalent to about $150,000). It was the feature debut of
writer-director Steven Sheil, who appears to have (loosely) based his
script on the real-life crimes of Fred and Rosemary West, who in 1995
were convicted of torturing and murdering 10 women in their Gloucester,
England home.
MUM & DAD was generally well received, but got
overshadowed (in the U.S., at least) by the even-nastier (and better)
torture fests INSIDE
and MARTYRS, both
of which appeared around the same time.
The Story
Lena is a twentyish Polish immigrant doing janitorial
work at London’s Heathrow Airport. Lena strikes up a friendship with her
co-worker Birdie, and accepts a ride home with Birdie after missing her
bus home. Birdie lives near the airport with her adopted parents and
older brother, who also works at Heathrow. All four are total
psychopaths whose activities include illicit torture and masturbating
with pieces of dead flesh; otherwise, though, they’re a fairly normal
English family.
Lena has barely set foot in the house when she’s
knocked out. She comes to bound in the basement, where “Mum” pierces and
slices her flesh. It seems Mum and her overweight hubbie “Dad” are
determined to make Lena a part of the family. Lena herself has no choice
in the matter: she can join the family or become one of the corpses
littering the house.
Lena is anything but a submissive victim. She tries to
arouse Mum’s sympathies while perpetrating tiny rebellions like tossing
a ripped-out tooth she finds out a second story window. For this
transgression she’s put inside a suitcase and beaten.
But Lena doesn’t give up. She visits an off-limits
upper room containing the “Big Sister,” a chained-up woman driven mad by
torture. This puts Lena in an appropriate frame of mind for Mum and
Dad’s next and grandest atrocity, a psychotic Christmas celebration
marked by pornographic gifts and hollowed-out torsos decorated with
candles. It’s here that the madness finally comes to a head and everyone
gets their just desserts.
The Direction
You may hate this film, but I don’t think anyone
can deny it’s an impressive piece of filmmaking. The direction by Steven
Sheil is pointed and smooth, with lighting and sound design that belay
the low budget and an impressively sustained atmosphere of comedic
hysteria. As for the bloodletting, it’s undeniably strong yet handled,
believe it or not, with surprising economy (proving that oftentimes less
really is more). Sheil also elicits excellent performances from
his entire cast, particularly Perry Benson and Dido Miles in the title
roles, who perfectly capture both the deceptive normalcy and
over-the-top psychosis of their characters.
Where the film falls down is in the script, which even
by traditional horror movie standards (for which one admittedly has to
be forgiving) is inconsistent and implausible. How is it nobody in
authority ever notices that Birdie’s co-workers are always disappearing?
Wouldn’t the stench of so many rotting body parts attract attention
emanating from a house near a busy airport? And how is it that the
family of hardened killers at the film’s center are so profoundly inept
at holding onto their latest captive? This is a good film, certainly,
but screenwriting doesn’t appear to be among Steven Sheil’s talents.
Vital Statistics
MUM & DAD
Revolver Entertainment
Director: Steven Sheil
Producer: Lisa Trnovski
Screenplay: Steven Sheil
Cinematography: Jonathan Bloom
Editing: Leo Scott
Cast: Perry Benson, Dido Miles, Olga Fedori, Ainsley Howard, Toby
Alexander, Micaiah Dring, Mark Devenport, Chris Roebuck, Claire Dyer