The Movie Waffler New Release Review - AIDEN | The Movie Waffler

New Release Review - AIDEN

Aiden review
Fleeing domestic abuse, a man is manipulated by a sinister therapist.

Review by Benjamin Poole

Directed by: Carl Medland

Starring: Carl Medland, Darren Earl Williams, Ivan Alexiev

Aiden poster

A seasoned connoisseur of micro-budget DIY horror auteur Carl Medland's oeuvre, I wrote in my review of Paranormal Farm 2 that while I'm not entirely sure how serious Carl actually is when he makes his films, I am nonetheless completely sincere in my enjoyment of them. Settling down the other Friday night to Carl's latest offering, Aiden – to be found on Prime; the spiritual home of this sort of bargain idiosyncrasy - with an especially strong vodka martini in hand (hard alcohol is an advised serving suggestion for the Medland canon), any lingering uncertainty was resolved.

Aiden review

Focussing on domestic violence within a gay male relationship, Aiden is a determined attempt to essay toxic masculinity via a queer framework: an ostensibly serious prospect, which is dealt with sensitively. Of primary interest is the scarcity of such a representation, because even though LGBTQ+ depiction has become more conspicuous in recent cinema, it is yet rare for homosexual characters to not be ultimately defined by their very gayness. There are exceptions (I love Bottoms, say, for its quotidian gay girlies), but the abiding archetype is the sort of troubled characterisation found in Georgia Oakley's (stunning) period drama Blue Jean or the absurd histrionics of Saltburn (remember Saltburn?!). Aiden joins last year's imperial Femme in being a raw and honest portrayal of dysfunction and abuse within male companionship, a welcome antidote to the shiny, happy queerness frequently used to illustrate gay characters (who so often provide mere camp foil to the straight protagonist, à la the gay best friend trope). Don't worry though, fellow Medheads: it does all go completely mental, and quite quickly too.


Seemingly shot entirely on Carl's iPhone, the slightly over-lit exposure of the cinematography adds further anxious urgency to the already aspirant performances, completing the ethereal and off-kilter tone of Aiden. This is particularly the case with Darren Earl Williams, who plays an unorthodox therapist: Williams is a Medland regular whose dramatic presence is automatically uncanny. Aiden (Medland) has turned to Dr. Williams (characters in Carl's films often have the same name as their actors. Sometimes this is deliberately meta, other times I just think it's a convenience) to help him to get over a controlling relationship with hunky narcissist Ivan (Ivan Alexiev). Aiden is scared of Ivan - who, when not attempting to micromanage his life, physically assaults him - but is nonetheless still in helpless thrall to the sculpted bully: "He just asserts this masculinity, this threat, this danger."

Aiden review

The ensuing discussion of the liaison throughout Aiden is pointed and seems embedded in either careful research or real-life experience. It certainly feels uncomfortably confessional; "not being funny," Aiden replies when questioned about involving the filth, "they don’t make it easy going to the police, especially male abuse from a male abuser. I've got pride."


Amid the patented strangeness of the film (such as when Dr. Williams demands that Aiden goes and lives in an isolated ranch for seven days without food or outside contact, but with instructions to film himself throughout the experience, and our lead just simply acquiesces) the psychology, the core of all this, rings humanly true (the ranch isn't even that isolated at all, tbh, being quite clearly a holiday destination Carl has hired out for the weekend in order to make Aiden). Thus, we follow Aiden as he ekes out his week in the static home, flashbacking to a violent, sexual history with Ivan, and having randomly strange experiences (accosted by a towering martian at midnight, meeting another camper who gives him a banana, etc) when he's not dipping into his Usborne Book of the Night Sky (what Roland Barthes might call a "semantic code" 😉). Carl is a sweet and watchable presence as ever (he reminds me of a smoother Danny Dyer but with the speaking voice of dear old George Michael), and, as in the Paranormal Farm trilogy, when the scares do come they are weird and effective.

Aiden review

With the rushing, sleek energy of the film, it's not incomprehensible that Carl was experiencing similar phenomena to his beleaguered protagonist and one day just upped and decided to make a film about the encounter, couching it within an ersatz genre template (a reading supported by the synonymous cast names). It has that insistency, the candid mien that true outsider art, from Cassavetes to Breen, asserts. Watching Carl's films, I’m reminded of Arthur Schopenhauer's maxim that "All truth passes through three stages. First, it is ridiculed. Second, it is violently opposed. Third, it is accepted as being self-evident." It takes a little while and an open heart to lock-in to Aiden's distinctive charms... we love art which is esoteric, which makes us work for it, after all. Anything could happen within the looping narrative logic of Aiden: Dr Williams uttering that "you're not to meet anyone on this experiment... I mean project" could be a heavy-handed portent or a fluffed line; likewise, if, say, the main character turned out to be a sort of artificial intelligence alien hybrid for some reason, then that's fine, too. Carl's crowning achievement as a filmmaker is to draw us, sometimes despite ourselves, into these unhinged worlds, wherein we become duly suggestible and willingly accepting of their inscrutable whimsy.

Aiden is on UK/ROI VOD now.



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