Review of Nasty Baby

Nasty Baby (2015)
6/10
An abrupt shift in tone and content leaves us behind
19 February 2016
Warning: Spoilers
Sebastian Silva's Nasty Baby is a movie that features a tonal shift so abrupt you find yourself questioning the likelihood of the behaviour you are witnessing. It seems forced and unrealistic, as though the writer, director and star (all Silva) knew he had this destination in mind, but didn't really know how to get us there.

He's done tonal shifts before, and much better, in Crystal Fairy, for example, which was a kind of quirky comedy until an absolutely poignant moment toward the end almost had me in tears.

In Nasty Baby, the shift is handled with a plot device we've all seen before, so it feels like the movie wants to move into thriller territory without warning. Perhaps because it feels so unrealistic it's hard to take seriously as anything other than typical-for-that-genre fare.

It finishes with the trio - two bearded gay men and a woman, trying to get pregnant - needing to dispose of a body. They didn't mean to kill him, but it happened in self defense. Why doesn't the Silva character call the police as soon as it happens? "He'll get deported," his boyfriend says. Is he an illegal immigrant? He must be the only one who also has a job as a trendy artist. Most illegal immigrants work for peanuts. If he is worried about deportation, why is he in such a high profile career?

Nasty Baby starts like a Nicole Holofcener drama, with quirky, believable characters trying to work out with what they want for themselves and each other. Silva should have watched one of Holofcener's movies to see that that would have been enough: perhaps he thinks an abrupt tonal shift is required of him now. It doesn't look like the movie believes it either.

Another thing: why on Earth is the elderly gay neighbour so efficient at disposing of corpses? He almost seems to smile when he sees the body. What is up with *that*?
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