The Gist
Two newly formed friends begin to work on the theory that a conspiracy theory is happening in their apartment building.
The Review
In 2019 a film opened here in Australia with very little fanfare – it was a film that blended genres together so brilliantly and was so well written that I fell in love with it straight away – that film was called Synchronic and still to this day I declare that movie never got the love that it deserved. Not only did the film get me to fall in love with it straight away it also put filmmakers Justin Benson and Aaron Moorhead on my radar.
When I heard that their new movie, titled Something In The Dirt, was landing I jumped at the opportunity to watch it, but that is where the disappointment started to set in because apart of the post-apocalyptic feel that the two manage to bring to modern day Los Angeles and the small moments of grit in the film there are very little similarities between this film and what made Synchronic so good.
Something In The Dirt revolves around two characters. There is Levi (Benson) who suddenly arrives on the scene at what appears to be a semi-vacant apartment building. Levi is a bartender with a criminal record, one that he says he doesn’t deserve. The other character is Levi’s brand new neighbour – openly gay Evangelical Christian John (Moorhead).
Upon Levi’s arrival the two begin to bond straightaway while sitting in the building’s dingy courtyard watching fire-fighting helicopters battle a wildfire in the local hills. John is the perfect neighbour, asking the right questions and offering Levi all of his ex-husband’s furniture in a bid to help him move in.
But soon the two have another bonding experience when they both realise that something supernatural is happening in the apartment building and they start to dream of what would happen if they caught the event on tape and released it as a documentary.
There are elements of Something In The Dirt that I found really worked. The natural acting styles of Benson and Moorhead do lend themselves to the mockumentary genre really well but I fear that a lot of people watching the film will find themselves feeling a little cheated that after such a brilliant opening to the film it then delves into the traditional mockumentary style and are told that the opening scene was a ‘re-creation’ of when Levi and John first met.
Likewise the way the film explores the notion that once a person starts on the whole conspiracy theory they end up going down a rabbit hole really interested me. During the pandemic I found myself doing a number of radio pieces on the conspiracy theories going around online at that time and I saw that thing happen first-hand. The fact that Benson and Moorhead chose to explore that theory in such a Lovecratian way is admirable but sadly this film ends up being barely a pass mark.
The biggest weakness I found in this film is that it doesn’t hold its suspense throughout the way that it should. This is basically a film where one character has a sketchy criminal record that he finds himself constantly defending while the first time we meet the other character he has blood on his clothes, which he denies with a flimsy story about it being a drink, whose ex-husband has ‘left.’ Meanwhile something supernatural may or may not be happening in their apartment building. If filmmakers can’t hold suspense with those things mixed into the screenplay then something is seriously wrong – yet there are times during this film were the storyline reaches such a lull that the audience’s mind starts to wander to more mundane things.
The Verdict
Something In The Dirt feels like a missed opportunity. With the talent of Moorhouse and Benson this could easily have become a mockumentary as good as the classic Lake Mungo but instead we are left with a film that starts off promising but trails off into something that will disappoint many.
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