‘Bodies, Bodies, Bodies’ Cast and Director on the FIlm’s Villain and Social Media – ELLE

The best scary movies hold up a mirror to societyperhaps that explains why Bodies, Bodies, Bodies, the latest cool-kid horror film from A24, has become an immediate sensation. Set at a palatial country house amid a coming storm, the satirical film follows a group of vicious, privileged 20-somethings who converge at their friend Davids (a perfectly cast Pete Davidson) parents McMansion for a hurricane party. As the rain sets in, the group decides to play Bodies, Bodies, Bodiesa party game where a player selected as the murderer must tag and kill a victim, at which point the whole group must ferret out the killer among thembut the festivities go from merely tense to terrifying as the friends begin to actually die one by one.

(L-R) Amandla Stenberg, Maria Bakalova

For director Halina Reijn, the party gameand the things it reveals about the characters playing itwas half the appeal of the film. I have a tight friend group, and we used to play that game, says the Dutch filmmaker. [Whether] you call it Mafia or Werewolf or Murderer or whatever, it would always be a complete disaster. Everybody would fight each other, and it would be total psychological warfare, and all these secrets would come out. Indeed, almost as soon as Sophie (Amandla Stenberg) suggests they play a round, the others are quick to object, pointing out that the game dissolves into tears every time they play. The backlash probably isnt helped by the fact that, although Sophie has clearly known the rest of the friends since childhood, she doesnt seem to be entirely welcome at the mansion. Plus, shes brought along her girlfriend of six weeks, Bee (Maria Bakalova), without asking permissionnever mind that Sophies ex-girlfriend, Jordan (Myhala Herrold), is among the group gathered there.

The characters uneasy camaraderie is outdone only by the actors obvious affection for each other in real life. I dont know if it was just the way we were in this random hotel in this little town [or just] the trauma bonding of making a movie, says Rachel Sennott, whose party-girl character Alice has showed up to the house with her brand-new 40-year-old boyfriend Greg (Lee Pace) in tow. [But by] the end of the first week, we were shooting that scene in the gym with Greg, and it was such an intense day, and we were all just sleeping on each other when we literally met each other a week ago. Bakalova agrees. We clicked pretty quickly, she says. We pretty much trauma bonded immediately because we had these huge rain-wind machines, we had blood, mud, and everything that you can imagineits like the end of the world is coming.

(L-R) Maria Bakalova, Halina Reijin, Rachel Sennott

(L-R) Myhala Herrold,Maria Bakalova, Amanda Stenberg, Rachel Sennott

The film is a classic whodunnit slasher, keeping you guessing until the very end as to whos responsible for the killings. As the hurricane approaches, the characters down shots and pop pills; by the time tragedy strikes, then, sobriety and mindfulness are already distant memories. (The one exception is Sophie, who is freshly out of rehabthough shes not exactly the healthiest decision-maker of the bunch to begin with.) With each new death, the group becomes more and more paranoid until the lifelong friends are all accusing each other of multiple murders. Like many horror movies, Bodies, Bodies, Bodiesseeks to make a broader statement about good and evil. Tellingly, however, everyone involved in making the film has a different opinion on who, or what, the real monster is. To Reijn, the true villain is the feral, Lord of the Flies-esque groupthink that takes over the charactersjust as it can also affect all of us, no matter how sophisticated we think we are: Are we beasts or are we civilized? What does it take for us to become an animal again, and how little is necessary?

The cast members think otherwise. Chase Sui Wonders, who plays Davids picture-perfect girlfriend Emma, makes repeated references to the posh prison of the setting. (The gaudy mansion, where if you look too closely its just so tacky and grossits all nightmarish, she says.) Sennott cites the groups hysteria and paranoia as their downfall, while Stenberg singles out the wealthy characters extremeand painfully unexaminedprivilege as the source of the films evil. Bakalova, meanwhile, contends that the biggest menace of the story is the lack of trust and the lack of honesty that these people have. They call each other friends, and they say that they love each other, but they actually do not really know each other at all.

They call each other friends, and they say that they love each other, but they actually do not really know each other at all.

Even so, theres one malevolent force that everyone agrees is at least partly to blame: social media. Like so many of us, the characters of Bodies, Bodies, Bodies are more concerned with saying or doing the right things in front of an audience than with actually figuring out how to be good people. (During a particularly tense moment when the surviving characters are terrified for their lives, Sennotts perennially unhelpful Alice turns to Sophiea queer, Black recovering addictand shrieks, Im an ally!) A big part of it is: how people will treat us, what people will think about us if we do not really fit into the norm of this is good? says Bakalova. The glare of social media makes it hard to distinguish the pursuit of bettering ourselves from that of bettering others opinions of usas Reijn puts it, It used to be just actors growing up front of cameras, but now everybody grows up in front of cameras.

The result is a culture where performative goodness carries more weight than anything we do when others arent watching. The friends at the core of Bodies, Bodies, Bodies have fully bought into that worldview: in a scathingly clever indictment of social justice-obsessed internet culture, the script by Sarah DeLappe is chock-full of wellness-oriented internet slang like safe space and toxic, and the characters relentlessly fling accusations of triggering and gaslighting at each other. They pride themselves on virtue signaling and out-woking one another. Even under life-or-death stakes, they cant turn off their hyper-awareness of how theyre being perceivedand thats what gets in the way of actually finding out what happened, Herrold says. Like so many others in this time, theyre treading this new infrastructure of accountability so gingerly and with so much fear, while also failing deeply to see the ways in which they embody the things that they say that they dont, says Stenberg. Perhaps it seems ironic that a movie about the horrors of social media would take place largely in a shuttered house with no electricity, phone, or internet access, butStenberg arguesthats the point. Theres such a small gap between the experiences that we have and then the relationship that we have now to broadcasting those experiences in a presentational way to the world, so once that element is taken away where the internet is gone and theres no invisible audience, then its revealed that the basis of [these characters] relationship is quite fragile.

Just as fragile are their relationships to themselves. Its clear that David, Emma, Sophie, Alice, and Jordan no longer know each other as well as they did when they were growing up together, but one thing they still have in common is that they are definitely deeply afraid of acknowledging their own privilege, says Stenberg. As far as shes concerned, thats where the movies humor comes from. The fact that there are large swathes of people who believe that they are somehow exempt from interrogating their own racism and sexism and misogyny because their intellectualism makes them feel like they are exempt from interrogating themselveslike, thats hilarious to me. As an outsider, not just to the friend group but also to their entire socioeconomic class, lower-class immigrant Bees presence illuminates the gap between who these rich kids say they are and who they actually turn out to be.

(L-R) Amandla Stenberg, Maria Bakalova, Chase Sui Wonders, Rachel Sennott

Take Davids girlfriend Emma, for example. Shes incredibly image-conscious, says Wonders of her character. Shes talking to the new girl and being really nice and putting on a smile, but then not having awareness of how unwelcoming and unfriendly she can be. Its just funny the contradictions that exist with people who are constantly trying to be at the helm of all these issues and topics, when in fact, boots on the ground, its not necessarily the case [that youre] tolerant of the person sitting next to you. Or consider Herrolds hostile, wounded Jordan, who prides herself on not being as insanely privileged as her friends: shes only upper middle-class, after all. I just think that she wants to be better than them, says Herrold. I think she fears being perceived as one of them, so she takes on a way of being so that visually it doesnt seem like shes like them, but she is a lot like them.

Though it's difficult to fully explore without spoiling the plot, that sense of duality turns out to be key to the whole film. Bodies, Bodies, Bodies isnt just a horror movie about saying one thing and doing another. Its also about the difference between our intentions towards the people around us and the impact we actually have on them: Even the most well-meaning decisions can have disastrous consequences. In that sense, we all have the capacity to be both good and evil, just depending on the circumstances, according to Bakalova. Impressively, the film strikes a careful balance between attacking cancel culture and the internets collective obsession with wokeness without attacking the good intentions that typically drive it. The point isnt to shit on Gen Z and say theyre so vapid and stupid. I think Gen Z is incredibly sophisticated and intelligent and probably has had the most access to information that any generation has had, says Stenberg. Its also important to laugh at the parts of ourselves that are flawed and hurting and strange, especially because we have no previous conception for any time or culture like this. And when it comes to scary movies that play upon real-world fears, the idea of confronting the capacity for evil in all of us, the potential we all have to cause immense harm to the people we care aboutthats the greatest horror of all.

Keely Weiss is a writer and filmmaker. She has lived in Los Angeles, New York, and Virginia and has a cat named after Perry Mason.

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'Bodies, Bodies, Bodies' Cast and Director on the FIlm's Villain and Social Media - ELLE

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