It’s incredibly human to want to be seen and accepted, warts and all. It’s a deeply vulnerable experience and territory that can be ripe for horror as characters reach troubling breaking points in order to become popular and stop feeling like an outcast. People will do whatever it takes to fit in, even if that […]
It’s incredibly human to want to be seen and accepted, warts and all. It’s a deeply vulnerable experience and territory that can be ripe for horror as characters reach troubling breaking points in order to become popular and stop feeling like an outcast. People will do whatever it takes to fit in, even if that means losing themselves in the process. It’s perhaps quite fitting that Grafted, the debut feature film from New Zealand filmmaker Sasha Rainbow, has come out during the same time as Coralie Fargeat’s The Substance, a movie that’s about altering one’s appearance to be accepted. Grafted is the perfect companion piece and counterpoint. They both explore similar themes and fragile characters, but go about this in entirely different ways.
Grafted comes across as the stitched together synthesis of Eyes Without A Face, Single White Female, and Re-Animator. There are also several sequences that feel like they’re ripped right out of a Takashi Miike movie. Grafted has a sentimental core that’s perpetually threatened to be suffocated beneath regenerating malice and carnage. It’s an exceptional cinematic calling card for Rainbow about how to be comfortable in your own skin…even if that means taking someone else’s skin.
Wei (Joyena Sun) finds herself adrift and out of her comfort zone, yet there’s a grounding satisfaction to be found in her desire to carry out her father’s unfinished skin graft research and crack the macabre code that took his life. Wei is at war with who she is, to the point that she can’t even speak her native tongue anymore and is pushed to be a facsimile of herself. She’s so starved for love and acceptance – from anyone – the likes of which proves that the person you are is more than skin deep. Grafted continually preaches that people are more than what they look like, which may be an obvious message, but it’s still powerful, nonetheless.