Advertisement
Film

Bold, arresting, difficult – Luca Guadagnino’s ‘Suspiria’ is a remake to fear

Despite a bold advance warning of six acts and an epilogue, Simon Brew can’t take his eyes off this stunning and compelling – if inevitably a bit overlong – reboot

Trying to put together a synopsis overview of the new Suspiria isn’t, bluntly, likely to help too much. A dense, complex two-and-a-half-hour remake of a much briefer film – Dario Argento’s original ran nearly an hour shorter – Call Me By Your Name director Luca Guadagnino’s fresh telling of the story keeps the origins of the first movie, of a young woman who arrives at a world-renowned dance school. But it then obeys the rules of good remakes: do something different. Find new things to say. Tread a slightly different path. Oh, and make it all a swine to explain. A set of ingredients that give the new version a compelling reason to exist, even if devotees of the original may remain unmoved.

Guadagnino, then – working from David Kajganich’s screenplay – instantly takes a turn by setting his film against the backdrop of a heavily divided 1977 Berlin. It’s a move that straight away gives the story a point of notable difference, and something the film keeps coming back to throughout. It’s into this world that Susie Bannon – played superbly by Dakota Johnson (Fifty Shades Of Grey) – arrives, auditioning to be a part of Helena Markos’ famous dance company. And it’s here we meet Madame Blanc, played expertly by Tilda Swinton, a woman who manages to make the simple task of individually greeting her students feel a little unnerving. There is, of course, more to come.

For as you’d expect, this is a dance company with much going on behind its doors (without spoiling anything, that’s some understatement), and Guadagnino – utilising a hugely effective and unsettling score from Radiohead’s Thom Yorke – doesn’t go light on the sense of foreboding. The film, after all, opens with Chloë Grace Moretz’s Patricia telling psychoanalyst Dr Josef Klemperer her view of what’s going on, a view that a compassionate and curious Klemperer nonetheless all but dismisses with the stroke of his pen. Additionally, subtlety isn’t always the movie’s preferred tactic. The muted colour scheme, the relentless rain, the often-hostile edits are used to jarring effect. Rarely does the film let you settle, and there are moments where the impact of a sudden switch of shot is utterly shocking.

It’s certainly a bold film that levels with you up front as to just how long it’s going to be

Foreknowledge of the original isn’t required here, but also, there’s little point pretending that this is a mainstream, easily accessible psychological horror. It absolutely isn’t. Those sudden, unnerving edits, the commitment to – as teased at the start – six acts and an epilogue (it’s certainly a bold film that levels with you up front as to just how long it’s going to be), and a narrative that’s pretty overt about its subtexts isn’t generally a cocktail for a wide, welcoming commercial horror. Conversely, if you let it into your head, it’s not going to be leaving any time soon.

Not an easy film, this, and one that perhaps inevitably feels too long. Still, crucially, the new Suspiria is all but impossible to take your eyes off. It’s bold, arresting, difficult cinema. In the hands of Guadagnino, this is one revisiting of a story that very much has a reason for being, and given the high esteem in which the (still superior) original is rightly held, that’s no small feat.

Advertisement
Advertisement

★★★★☆

Simon Brew is the founder and editor of Film Stories, filmstories.co.uk

@simonbrew

Advertisement

Change a vendor's life this Christmas

This Christmas, 3.8 million people across the UK will be facing extreme poverty. Thousands of those struggling will turn to selling the Big Issue as a vital source of income - they need your support to earn and lift themselves out of poverty.

Recommended for you

Read All
John David Washington and Danielle Deadwyler: 'When are Black people not in dire straits?'
Danielle Deadwyler as Berniece and John David Washington as Boy Willie in The Piano Lesson
Film

John David Washington and Danielle Deadwyler: 'When are Black people not in dire straits?'

Emily Mortimer: 'Britain can be a tolerant place – but obviously there's times when it isn't'
Film

Emily Mortimer: 'Britain can be a tolerant place – but obviously there's times when it isn't'

Paddington is a British icon. So why are we all not a bit more like Paddington?
Film

Paddington is a British icon. So why are we all not a bit more like Paddington?

Will Gladiator II be a useful cautionary tale about putting self-serving man-babies in charge?
Paul Mescal in Gladiator II
Film

Will Gladiator II be a useful cautionary tale about putting self-serving man-babies in charge?

Most Popular

Read All
Renters pay their landlords' buy-to-let mortgages, so they should get a share of the profits
Renters: A mortgage lender's window advertising buy-to-let products
1.

Renters pay their landlords' buy-to-let mortgages, so they should get a share of the profits

Exclusive: Disabled people are 'set up to fail' by the DWP in target-driven disability benefits system, whistleblowers reveal
Pound coins on a piece of paper with disability living allowancve
2.

Exclusive: Disabled people are 'set up to fail' by the DWP in target-driven disability benefits system, whistleblowers reveal

Cost of living payment 2024: Where to get help now the scheme is over
next dwp cost of living payment 2023
3.

Cost of living payment 2024: Where to get help now the scheme is over

Citroën Ami: the tiny electric vehicle driving change with The Big Issue
4.

Citroën Ami: the tiny electric vehicle driving change with The Big Issue