|

|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Cast/Crew
director
Kareem
A. Bland
script
Kareem
A. Bland
cast
list
Sakeenah
Nicole
Nicholas
Vitulli
Archie
Ekong
Duane
Littles
|
|
|
roducer
Val Lewton was the driving force behind a series
of innovative B-horror movies for the RKO Studios
beginning with "Cat People" in 1942, and
ending with "Bedlam" in 1946. He
developed a new style of horror film storytelling
by presenting credible characters living and
working in the real world amid real day to day
problems. The supernatural element was dropped
into this mundane reality and seemed all the more
suspenseful in contrast. Now, I don't know if
writer-director Kareem A. Bland is a fan of
Lewton's films, but he's definitely on the same
wavelength.
Amid the buckets of blood and
breasts on hand in most indie Horror thrillers,
"Bleeding Rose" stands out as something
entirely different. I was very pleasantly
surprised at how easily the movie balanced its
desire to express something more than mere genre
while still satisfying the needs of the genre. One
of the great traps filmmakers fall into is the
"anti-genre" film, where they
intentionally subvert all of the pleasures of the
chosen genre to make some thematic or moral point,
but only end up producing a "feathered
fish". That is, something neither fish nor
fowl that pleases neither the indie/art film crowd
nor the ordinary moviegoer looking for his genre
fix. "Bleeding Rose" wants to be more
than a thriller but still takes the time to
respectfully construct an effective suspense
thriller narrative.
"Bleeding Rose"
centers on Ebony Rose (Sakeenah Nicole), an
attractive young woman haunted by strange dreams
and visions of her abusive ex-boyfriend, Alex
(Nicholas Vitulli), while trying to start a new
life back home in
New York City
. She is reunited with an old friend named Cedric
(Archie Ekong), who is working hard to establish
his new record label. Cedric and his
"genius" lyricist partner and best
friend Kyle (Duane Littles) are looking for a new
voice and ask her to come down to their studio and
audition. The three eventually form a love
triangle and become suspicious of one another as
Ebony's friends and family are stalked and killed
one by one by an unknown killer.
There is a great, relaxed
quality in the first act of "Bleeding
Rose". It hints at the thriller beats to
come, but holds its focus on Ebony's new life and
circle of friends, with the documentary like feel
of the scenes at the recording studio and the
almost improvisational feel of the performances
coming across as natural and real. There is a
confidence that Bland demonstrates throughout
these scenes that draws us deeper into the story,
without feeling obliged to hit us over the head
with one shock after another. Instead, the film
concentrates on telling its story through its
characters. The suspense builds and the thriller
set pieces emerge, more effective since they
involve characters we've been given the chance to
know.
One of these set pieces,
involving Ebony's friend Candice (Elizabeth
Ruelas) actually seems to be a tribute to Lewton,
who designed his movies around a series of what he
and director Jacques Tourneur called
"Buses". This was the name given to the
sudden jumps they began in "Cat People",
in which actress Jane Randolph is stalked along a
New York street until suddenly she and the
audience is jolted by the hiss of a bus stopping
in front of her and opening its doors. Bland
revisits this in his movie's best set piece, as
Candice is stalked in a subway and we are jolted
by the sudden arrival of the train.
Unlike most ultra low budget
films, "Bleeding Rose" is not hampered
by its lack of resources, unknown actors and
effects. It also has the intelligence to leave the
classic model of low-budget filmmaking behind and
use the freedom of new technology to expand its
canvas. The old way of making a horror movie fast
and cheap required bringing a cast together to a
single location and murdering them one by one, in
an intense shoot regulated by the high cost of
camera, sound and light rental, and the
complexities of moving cast and crew from place to
place. However, in this digital age, a very
accomplished movie can be produced with small
cameras and sound equipment the filmmaker can
afford to own, and with the use of available
light, move from location to location with real
speed, giving the movie more production value and
a real sense of place.
"Bleeding Rose" has
a nice feel for its
New York
locations and its steady handheld style is
effective, using the new technology not to mimic
some large
Hollywood
movie, but to do what they do best -- eavesdrop,
lurk, and watch like an electronic voyeur. The
only criticism I have of the movie is one that I
have to excuse. There are moments when the sound
is not as clear, or the lighting is not quite
perfect. Jumps in editing that seem to be the
result of missing scenes near the end as the movie
rushed headlong into its conclusion. These are all
technical points and they are found in all
indie movies and are always solved by throwing
more money at the screen. So, maybe somebody
should throw Kareem A. Bland some money and see
what he can achieve.
Outside of those criticisms,
"Bleeding Rose" is a skillfully made
thriller with some interesting themes involving
racial identity and abusive relationships. These
are not separate things, but instead are
effectively part of one complete story. Hopefully,
Bland's "Bleeding Rose" will find a
niche amid the more exploitative fare on the DVD
shelves. In any case, it stands as a very
effective example of what can be accomplished on a
low budget and meager resources.
|