| Sound of My Voice | |
|---|---|
Theatrical release poster | |
| Directed by | Zal Batmanglij |
| Written by | Zal Batmanglij Brit Marling Abdulkadir Güngör[1] |
| Produced by | Hans Ritter Brit Marling Shelley Surpin |
| Starring | |
| Cinematography | Rachel Morrison |
| Edited by | Tamara Meem |
| Music by | Rostam Batmanglij |
Production company | Skyscraper Films |
| Distributed by | Fox Searchlight Pictures |
Release dates |
|
Running time | 85 minutes[2] |
| Country | United States |
| Language | English |
| Budget | $135,000[3] |
| Box office | $408,015[4] |
Sound of My Voice is a 2011 Americanpsychological thriller film directed byZal Batmanglij in his feature directorial debut. The screenplay was written by Batmanglij andBrit Marling, and the film starsChristopher Denham, Nicole Vicius, and Marling. The plot focuses on two documentary filmmakers who infiltrate a cult led by a charismatic woman who claims to be from the future.
The film premiered at the 2011Sundance Film Festival and was also selected to close the 2011SXSW Film Festival. It was released byFox Searchlight Pictures on April 27, 2012.[5]
InLos Angeles, substitute teacher Peter Aitken and his girlfriend, aspiring writer Lorna Michaelson, are making a documentary about a secretive cult. Their goal is to expose its leader, a mysterious woman named Maggie, as a fraud.
After being deemed ready, Peter and Lorna are instructed to shower thoroughly and dress in white surgical gowns. They are then driven blindfolded to a secret basement location. There, they are received by Klaus, with whom they perform an intricate, practiced handshake. Inside, they join eight other members to meet Maggie, who uses an oxygen tank. She explains that the strict hygiene protocols are necessary to protect her from her severe illness.
Maggie claims she is a time-traveler from the year 2054. She describes a future of war and famine and says she has returned to select a group to prepare for the coming hardships. Maggie leads the group through intense psychological exercises, but she never definitively proves or disproves her extraordinary story. Her charisma is powerful, and both Peter and Lorna find their skepticism wavering. Lorna grows concerned as Peter, who was initially the most adamant about exposing Maggie, seems to be falling under her spell.
After several meetings, Maggie instructs Peter to bring her Abigail Pritchett, an eccentric eight-year-old from his class. Maggie claims the girl is her mother and threatens to ban Peter and Lorna from the group if he fails to comply. When Peter considers following Maggie's order, Lorna is outraged. Soon after, Lorna is privately approached by a woman named Carol Briggs, who identifies herself as a Justice Department agent and states that Maggie is a wanted felon. Lorna agrees to help Carol capture Maggie, keeping the plan a secret from Peter.
Peter arranges for Maggie to meet Abigail during a class field trip at theLa Brea Tar Pits. When Maggie and the girl meet, Peter is stunned to see them wordlessly perform the cult's secret handshake. Abigail asks Maggie how she knew the handshake, and Maggie replies, "You taught it to me." At that moment, law enforcement agents burst in and apprehend Maggie. As distraught cult members accuse Peter of betrayal, he exchanges a look with Lorna, who gives a slight smile. Abigail then asks Peter who Maggie was, and he, shaken, replies that he does not know.
Sound of My Voice was named among the Top Indie Films at Festivals in 2011 oncriticWIRE.[6]
On thereview aggregator websiteRotten Tomatoes, 76% of 109 critics' reviews are positive, with an average rating of 6.9/10.[7]Metacritic, which uses aweighted average, assigned the film a score of 67 out of 100, based on 30 critics, indicating "generally favorable" reviews.[8]
Manohla Dargis ofThe New York Times wrote: "Nobody is gutted inSound of My Voice, a smart, effectively unsettling movie about the need to believe and the hard, cruel arts of persuasion. But over time the men and women who meet in a mysterious house in an anonymous Los Angeles neighborhood... are opened up bit by bit, wound by wound, until they’re sobbing and laughing, their insides smeared across the carpet."[9]
Brent Simon ofShockya.com called the film "a delicate, mesmeric thing that dances darkly along the edges of psychology, religion and science-fiction, raising questions about faith, identity, self-betterment and romantic connection."[10]
In September 2012, the film won the Octopus d’Or for Best International Feature Film at theStrasbourg European Fantastic Film Festival.[11]
In his review of 2012's standout films,Variety critic Peter Debruge noted that he had watchedSound of My Voice four times, calling it an "ingenious low-budget puzzler."[12]
The film was originally intended to be the first installment of a trilogy.[13]
Sound of My Voice atBox Office Mojo