Film Review: Suspiria (2018)

Screened at Regal in Union Square, 2:40pm showtime. Movie Theater Snacks: Small Diet Coke and some Peanut M&M’s, which is very unlike me. I never drink soda.

One Suspiriorum, Two Italian directors, Three Mothers, and a Dozen Witches.

I had no previous feelings towards this new remake of Suspiria. On one hand, I adore Dario Argento’s original 1977 film, but knowing that an equally impressive filmmaker Luca Guadagnino was directing this new film, I had no fear that he wouldn’t do a good job.

The story is the same: a young American aspiring dancer dreams of being part of a world renowned dance company based in Berlin. While she is accepted, happy and ready to begin learning, there is a mysterious foundation holding up this famous dance company that she, nor anyone, is prepared for. The 2018 remake is nothing like the original film, and thats a great thing.

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An underlying feeling of dread and anxiety permeates the entire movie. Even when something normal or mundane were happening on screen, you just felt anxious as if something not quite right is going to happen. And guess what? It doesn’t. Fifty Shades of Gray star Dakota Johnson is absolutely wonderful in the film. Her basic and normal every-day-woman character is so blasé and average that she undermines your senses when her “time” to “shine” eventually comes to the screen. She’s the real star of the film, and you don’t even realize it until it’s too late.

But that’s not to say that Tilda Swinton isn’t the powerhouse she always is. Swinton plays not one, not two, but three characters in the film. The leader of the dance company Madame Blanc, who choreographs the “rituals” and routines. Josef Klempere, a psychotherapist who becomes interested in the dance company when one of his patients tells him it is run by witches. And finally Mater Suspiriorum herself, Mother Markos, the witch living beneath the academy in search of a new body. With Tilda Swinton’s sensational acting, on top of the incredible makeup used in the film, I truly didn’t know it was her playing all these characters. When the credits roll, they even fake these characters by putting fake actors names. The character of Doctor Josef Klempere is named in the credits as Lutz Ebersdorf. Very, very interesting.

My highest recommendations go to 2018’s Suspiria. It’s unlike anything Hollywood is making today. It’s horrifying, anxious, sad, and downright beautiful. It’s a piece of cinema that will be remembered for years to come.

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