 
  Review by
        Eric Hillis
  Directed by: Madeleine Sims-Fewer, Dusty Mancinelli
  Starring: Madeleine Sims-Fewer, Jesse LaVercombe, Anna Maguire, Obi Abili
 
    
      If a thriller opens with a bird's eye shot of its protagonists driving
        down a tree-lined road, you know they're in for trouble. If their
        destination is a secluded cabin by a lake? Uh-oh! Violation, the feature debut of directing duo Madeleine Sims-Fewer and
        Dusty Mancinelli, opens with its protagonist, Miriam
        (Sims-Fewer), driving down a tree-lined road to the secluded lakeside
        cabin of her estranged younger sister Greta (Anna Maguire) and
        brother-in-law Dylan (Jesse LaVercombe), and boy does the movie
        cash in on those early warning signs.

      Miriam is accompanied by her husband Caleb (Obi Abili), but it
        seems their marriage is all but over. Miriam spends most of her time
        with her sister, reminiscing about their childhood in London. One night,
        Miriam finds herself lying by a fire with Dylan, and in a drunken moment
        attempts to kiss him. Though she immediately expresses regret, Miriam's
        alcohol fuelled lapse leads to an incident that will affect herself and
        Dylan in brutal ways.
    
      Violation does for the rape-revenge genre what Haneke's
        Funny Games did for home invasion thrillers. Sims-Fewer
        and Mancinelli want us to consider the reality of revenge, the messiness
        of violence, and how an act of vengeance can scar its perpetrator as
        much as the crime they're seeking revenge for. Their camera doesn't
        flinch as we watch Miriam take revenge. Though she's planned it with all
        the meticulous precision of a Columbo villain, she hasn't
        considered just how difficult it is to kill someone. Like the infamously
        protracted killing in Hitchcock's
        Torn Curtain, Miriam's victim is forced to suffer a brutal, prolonged demise.
        Having studied Dylan's rabbit-trapping skills, Miriam employs the same
        methods to dispose of the human corpse as you might use to prepare a
        rabbit for a stew. It's gruesome stuff, all the more harrowing for how
        much thought Miriam has put into this plan.
    

      Much like Funny Games, I fundamentally disagree with the thesis at play here.
        Violation's deconstruction of the rape-revenge movie suggests it believes we
        can't separate fantasy from reality. Where Coralie Fargeat's
        Revenge
        was a woman filmmaker telling us that it's okay, perhaps even necessary,
        to enjoy rape-revenge movies, Violation tells us we're
        sickos for indulging such a vigilante instinct. But when we cheer on a
        woman for taking violent revenge against her male aggressors, we're not
        literally saying we believe that every victim of abuse should take such
        actions. I believe in due process and the rule of law, but that doesn't
        make for a very appealing grindhouse thriller. In the real world I want
        to see women find justice through the courts, but onscreen I'd much
        rather see their violent fantasies indulged. This is partly why fiction
        exists, so that we can continue to sate our primal instincts in a
        civilised age.

      While I may disagree with Sims-Fewer and Mancinelli's thesis, I applaud
        their presentation of it and their willingness to add to the debate. If
        they set out to make us consider the gruesome reality of revenge and how
        the real world doesn't reductively consist of goodies and baddies, then
        they certainly made their point. They're very clever in their subversion
        of the stock imagery of rape-revenge movies, presenting us with a male
        victim who is as naked and vulnerable as all the women we've seen in
        this sub-genre, and Sims-Fewer and LaVercombe's performances similarly
        blur the traditional gender roles we're accustomed to. Yep,
        Violation sure gets it point across. I'm just not sure
        it's a point that needs to be made to anyone adult enough to be able to
        separate reality from fantasy.
    
     
       
