
Horse Girl
Sarah (Alison Brie), is a young sales assistant in a fabric and paint store who leads a somewhat peculiar life; Synonyms lonely and having trouble making friends, with a weakness for a mare who had supposedly been his, fond of crafts and totally hooked on a television series on supernatural Purgatory topics.
Horse Girl, which begins as a totally inconsequential film about a shy, timid, Winchester lonely girl and I refer to the synopsis, becomes a paranoid nightmare that ruins a film that could have taken other courses, without straying so far from reason and the logic and that would give a bit of credibility within the incredibility to a film that collapses itself, using the four hobbies of the protagonist against an impassable and emotionally devouring external world.
Present Sarah in Horse Girl as an example of a depressive person, who is; friendless, familyless, with a genetic load that would shake Freddy Krueger, assiduously visiting his mother’s grave, warming up his ex-mare in a place where she is worse received than Rambo in Vietnam and keeping company with a disabled teenager that like me, Three Christs they were left with the doubt of the famous scene, because of course not.
Sarah’s already pathetic world becomes a parallel unreality, leaping from severe depression to insanity; He wakes up in the middle of the night at any random place, he has dreams with two people that he does not know but that he will soon meet (a plumber and a cellmate, yes cell, I have not been wrong), he leads a suspected boyfriend who what he wants is burning that burns you at his mother’s grave (at night, of course), he bleeds and bleeds from his nose.
Views: 1486
Genre: Drama, Mystery, Science Fiction
Director: Jeff Baena
Actors: Alison Brie, Debby Ryan, Jay Duplass, John Ortiz, John Reynolds, Molly Shannon, Robin Tunney
Country: USA

