Review by
        Benjamin Poole
  Directed by: Anita Rocha da Silveira
  Starring: Mari Oliveira, Lara Tremouroux, Arthur Santileone, Felipe Frazao, Bruna
      Linzmeyer, Thiago Fragoso
    
      The other day I was chatting to someone whose MA compared Islamic and
      Christian eschatology. As you can imagine, being a fascinated outsider I
      had a billion questions, and over the ensuing conversation they patiently
      explained that there was a great deal of narrative overlap between the
      three Abrahamic religions, with points of divergence occurring due to
      slightly different interpretations of similar events: elucidations which
      calcified into the doctrines which have defined the major creeds for
      ensuing millennia. To me, a respectful interloper, it seems that the
      belief systems which people build their understanding of the world around,
      and in some cases their identity, are fundamentally analogous. And further
      to this, a person's faith, the camp they fall into, may ultimately be
      tribal; an ideology perhaps defined in opposition to ostensibly separate
      classification, with the believer compelled by a human desire to be a part
      of something which has meaning bigger than the self. It's a similar
      dynamic to supporting a particular football team, or, in the case of
      Medusa, Brazilian filmmaker Anita Rocha da Silveira's at times startling
      sophomore feature, being part of a teenage gang: a need to belong, which,
      if desperate enough, overrides all logic and individual reason.

      In what could be the most adrenalised opening of the year, an androgynous
      dancer contorts against a pitch-black background, their impressive body
      twisted into an upside-down crawl (you know, like Regan going down the
      stairs) which they appealingly wrench to some intense night music, all the
      while lit by the stop/start tease of strobing red and green lights. Before
      you can say, "Oi Gasper (Noé), wake up you're having that dream again," we
      pull out to reveal a pair of black lacquered hands holding an iPhone
      screen wherein the action plays out, and a female face watching with
      suitable erotic wonder. Cut to night-time, Brasília: a wide angle takes in
      the blue shadowed depths of the back street where our dance dazed heroine
      leaves her bus to walk home alone. Except, not for long, as filling the
      background behind her is an eight strong gang, distinguished by the blank
      white Les yeux sans visage masks they all wear. They kick
      our girl to the kerb, screaming that she is a "filthy slut" and "a
      pervert" while they punch and boot her. As the gang terrorises the kid we
      notice their long hair, willowy frames and treble voices: they're girls
      themselves.
    
      Medusa's tricksy, exciting opening trains us to consider what comes next with a
      Brechtian eye, foregrounding its cultural themes and rhetoric. Concerned
      with female-on-female violence and the rising wave of active conservatism
      in Brazil, Rocha da Silveira's film is a serious satire of where the
      filmmaker sees Brazil heading, and which confronts its audience with vivid
      and sensual imagery to make its point.
    
      A key member of the gang is Mariana (Mari Oliveira), who spends her
      evenings stomping girls who her crew see as impure and imploring them to
      make video confessions converting to Christianity, and her days practising
      in a choir for a church which sanctions both activities. Their pastor (Thiago Fragoso) is an evangelical who is running for political office: "When He
      descends from heaven/ The whole universe will quake," the choir intone to
      a mini-pops beat, wall to wall smiles beaming beatifically. It is the
      campest thing you've ever seen, and a high comedy contrast to the cruelty
      of a few scenes earlier. As inspired by the nightmare rhythms of giallo,
      nothing is subtle in Medusa.

      Mariana is the dead spit of British actor Zawe Ashton - i.e., utterly
      gorgeous, which makes a justified retaliation from a would-be victim
      wherein Mariana gets her cheek cut open all the more poignant. Except not
      really: it's only a scar, but it doesn't coincide with the fascistic
      values of Mariana's contexts. Girls should be "beautiful, demure and at
      home," according to the church credo, and Mariana's so-perceived
      disfigurement means she can't be a receptionist at a Cosmetic Surgery
      anymore, a business where "looks are everything" (I did say that it was
      blunt). Mariana's boss chastises that a "worthy woman doesn't walk alone
      at night" and the disgraced gang member is forced to work as a nurse in a
      hospice, where an almost mythically revered patient resides: a hideously
      scarred casualty of the sort of carnage Mariana gleefully enacted.
    
      Medusa follows an A Clockwork Orange arc,
      wherein the stylised violence its anti-hero doles out in opening sequences
      are juxtaposed by the humble pie of the middle act. The problem with
      Medusa, however, is that during the ensuing plot it never quite recaptures or
      even capitalises on the kinetic potential of its opening. We understand
      its outlook within the first 20 minutes, and then it's a case of
      experiencing two hours or so of variations upon the theme. As Mariana
      inevitably falls in love with a male nurse, has tentative intimacies with
      a female colleague, and generally begins to realise that she's been an
      arsehole for x amount of years, the film is always watchable due to
      João Atala's gleaming cinematography and Rocha da Silveira's lively
      sense of humour. But if only the knife which assailed Mariana could have
      also slipped and lopped off some of the running time: less would be more
      to facilitate Medusa's mean and keen pop impact wherein Rocha da Silveira makes salient
      points about Brazil's socio-political situation.

      The recent news that the political future of (sure inspiration for
      Medusa's antagonism) Jair Bolsonaro has been apparently halted following an
      electoral ban provides welcome succour to Rocha da Silveira's
      disparagement of the forces which play upon insecurity and weaponise
      religion in order to foster hatred and sow tribal division. Duly,
      Medusa ends in existential crisis, with the reassuring prior
      promises of belonging and salvation ultimately proving to be as hollow and
      hopeless as a scream into the void.
    
    
    
      Medusa is in UK/ROI cinemas and on
      VOD from July 14th.
    
    
