The movie started out strong from the set pieces, performances to the tension. The second act balanced quite nicely between horror and comedic relief. The characters were surprisingly rational with their decisions, a rare trait in recent horror media.
However, the ending really insulted the audience. An extra character showed up solely as a plot device. They did briefly show the real backstory but it just felt so half-assed. Some stuff was never explained like how the cops ignore the protagonists, or the person who pointed them to this particular AirBnb...
Overall, it was going so well until the ending where I actually laughed out loud at how ridiculous it was. It was like either the director got tired of making the movie by the end or they ran out of budget and just decided that was good enough.
Plot summary
In town for a job interview, a young woman arrives at her Airbnb late at night only to find that it has been mistakenly double-booked and a strange man is already staying there. Against her better judgement, she decides to stay the night anyway.
Uploaded by: FREEMAN
October 27, 2022 at 08:43 AM
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It's great... until it's not
Plot holes, illogical
The movie is not bad, ok, but all the inconsistencies and illogical nonsense really ruined it for me. Some things just don't make sense at all and are completely unrealistic and illogical.
The scene with the cops is especially annoying. Her car is literally parked there and she fails to mention it? She could have asked them to check her license plate and the cops could find out who she was. The same with the other car.
I like the camera work and the atmosphere though. It's very tense. I like the body horror parts as well. Overall, a decent movie and my score would have been higher if they didn't ruin it with poor story writing.
More to it upon second watch
I don't always pick up a movie's deeper meaning upon first viewing. Usually for the first watch, I just want to enjoy the plot. That's how it was with Barbarian, a monster movie with more to say hiding below the surface.
Barbarian is a story about a woman interviewing for a job in Detroit, and the troubles that arise when she finds that her AirBnB is already occupied. I won't go into more plot details and I recommend you go into this movie knowing as little as possible.
It isn't possible, though, to avoid some spoilers in discussing the layers to Barbarian. So, spoilers ahead.
Beneath the horror movie lies a conversation about women and men. There are dangers in being a woman, which two of the primary characters briefly discuss. But there are also misperceptions that can lead to disaster. Who is good and who is bad, and how can one tell? Does a woman let bad men change her perception of the entire gender? Does she let it make her into a monster? Can a man change? What is a woman? What is a man? What should they be?
I went back and forth several times on whether the character Keith was going to be the movie's villain or not. Well done to the writers and director for that. Upon second watch of the film, I realized that many or maybe even all of the circumstances that put the audience and the character Tess on alert about Keith are situations outside of his control. He didn't mix-up the AirBnB reservations. He didn't open Tess's bedroom door as she slept. He didn't choose to get lost in the cavernous dungeon. But, he might have, and up until the very last second, the audience is left guessing about Keith. How difficult it is to judge someone's character.
Then, we switch to Justin Long's character AJ, a magnificent cut scene that left me surprised and delighted upon first viewing. Here's another man that we the audience might have a little trouble getting a solid handle on. The movie beautifully puts AJ in different situations in which we for a moment feel for him, or think that maybe he is innocent of his accused crimes, and then the movie yanks that thought away from us with AJ doing something bad. For example, we have AJ talking to his mom on the phone. How sweet, he's talking with his mom. He seems genuinely certain he didn't do anything wrong with that other actress. Then he hangs up on his mom without even saying goodbye. There goes that idea of him being a good son. Then, later in the movie, he's around the campfire with the unhoused man and Tess and he seems to be having a genuine moment of contrition and making the decision to grow and become better. Then, Mother busts into the scene and AJ runs off as quickly as possible, leaving Tess, whom he accidentally shot earlier, and the homeless man that gave them shelter in the dust.
The movie explores the ideas of character and how difficult it is to judge another's character, or even know our own character in an expertly crafted manner. The themes of gender, and trust, and abuse, are wonderfully couched in a genuinely scary and excellent horror movie.
Horror is thriving these days, with The Witch, Midsommar, It Follows, Hereditary, Us, Brandon Cronenberg's amazing film Possessor, and many more. Smart, well-crafted films that are both intense, frightening and thoughtful.