Bereavement (film)

Bereavement (retroactively titled Malevolence 2: Bereavement) is a 2010 American crime horror film directed by Stevan Mena and starring Michael Biehn, Brett Rickaby, Alexandra Daddario, Nolan Gerard Funk, and Spencer List. A prequel to Mena's film Malevolence, the story centers on an abducted child (List) who forced to bear witness to the crimes of a madman (Rickaby).

Bereavement
Directed byStevan Mena
Produced byStevan Mena
Written byStevan Mena
StarringMichael Biehn
Alexandra Daddario
Brett Rickaby
John Savage
Spencer List
Valentina de Angelis
Nolan Gerard Funk
Kathryn Meisle
Peyton List
Music bySteven Mena
CinematographyMarco Cappeta
Edited bySteven Mena
Production
company
Crimson Film
Distributed byAnchor Bay Entertainment
Mena Films
Release date
  • July 16, 2010 (2010-07-16) (Long Island Expo)
  • March 4, 2011 (2011-03-04) (United States)
Running time
109 minutes
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
Budget$2 million
Box office$10 million[1]

The film premiered at the Long Island International Film Expo on July 16, 2010, before being released to theaters on March 4, 2011. It received mixed reviews from critics and grossed $10 million on a $2 million budget. A sequel entitled Malevolence 3: Killer was released in 2018.

Plot

Martin Bristol, a young boy with congenital analgesia, is kidnapped by psychotic serial killer Graham Sutter. At an abandoned slaughterhouse once operated by his family, Graham cuts Martin's cheek before butchering a captive young woman in front of him. Martin attempts to escape, but Graham catches him and returns him to the slaughterhouse, where he continues to hold the boy and future female victims captive.

Over the next five years, Graham brutally butchers several young women, forcing Martin to watch as the trauma slowly desensitizes him. Graham, who feels guilt over killing the cattle he cared for at the slaughterhouse, talks and argues with the skull of a bull hung on the wall, apparently seeing it and several others like it around the property as some kind of deity. It is strongly implied that Graham was abused by his father and eventually murdered him, keeping his corpse concealed under a sheet in the attic.

After the death of her parents, young Allison Miller comes to live with her paternal uncle Jonathan, her aunt Karen, and her cousin Wendy in Minnersville, the same town where Graham commits his crimes. While out for a run, she sees Martin from the window of the supposedly abandoned slaughterhouse next to Graham's farmhouse. When she is almost hit by a truck, she meets a local boy, William, with whom she forms a relationship of sorts. One night, Jonathan intervenes as Allison and William are about to have sex.

The next day, Allison goes to the farmhouse after again seeing Martin in the slaughterhouse window and is captured by Graham. When she doesn't return home, Jonathan drives to the farmhouse, looking for her, but Graham shoots him dead. William, also searching for Allison, sees Jonathan's abandoned car and finds Allison locked inside a cold meat room when he investigates. William attempts to save her, but is killed by Graham. Graham has become fearful of Martin because of his inability to feel pain and pins his hand to the kitchen table with a knife to prevent him from leaving the slaughterhouse. Allison escapes by pushing a metal rod through a hole in the door and lifting the lock mechanism. She finds Martin with his hand still pinned on the kitchen table and removes the knife before carrying him out of the farmhouse.

Graham takes Jonathan's body to his home, and attacks Karen, who tells Wendy to run. Wendy runs upstairs and hides in her closet, tearfully listening to her mother die. Allison arrives at the house, just as Graham has set it on fire. Graham finds Wendy and decides to use her to replace Martin as his assistant, but Allison interrupts and stabs Graham, causing him to flee. Allison attempts to call 911, but Martin stabs her to death, his mind now completely twisted by years of Graham's abuse. He then kills Wendy before leaving the burning house. Martin returns to the farmhouse and attacks the injured Graham with an axe. Graham thanks Martin before being hacked to death. The next morning, the authorities arrive at the smoldering ruins of the Miller house and rule it an accident.

Martin begins to construct a new skeletal shrine in the farmhouse, with the bull's skull as the head. He then stares out the window, waiting for his next victim.

In a post-credit scene set five years later, a girl named Courtney Harrison flees from an unseen pursuer. She enters the farmhouse and discovers Martin, who is now older, sitting at a table. When she asks for help, Martin slowly turns around, as the film ends.

Cast

Additionally, Ashley Wolfe portrays Katherine Bristol, Martin's mother, and Andrea Havens portrays Agatha. Appearing as victims of Graham are Marissa Guill as the first young woman killed before Martin and Shannon Lambert-Ryan as Lucy, the corpse Allison finds in the freezer. John Richard Ingram reprises his role as Sheriff Riley from Malevolence in an uncredited appearance.[2] Jay Cohen and Courtney Bertolone appear in archive footage from Malevolence as the adult Martin and Courtney Harrison in the post-credit scene.

Production

During post-production, director Stevan Mena's initial cut of the film was three hours long. Things cut from the film included overtly gory scenes. The film is a prequel to Malevolence, stating "The only way to describe it is like an epic horror story. It's more in the vein of The Shining, whereas the original was kind of like Halloween or Friday the 13th. Bereavement is more of a character study".[3]

Release

The film was shown at the Long Island International Film Expo on July 16, 2010.[2] The film was released in theaters by Anchor Bay Entertainment on March 4, 2011.

A director's cut of the film, retitled Malevolence 2: Bereavement, was released to home media by Mena Films on October 12, 2018.[4]

Reception

Bereavement has received mixed to negative reviews from critics. The film currently holds a 44% "rotten" rating on review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes with an average score of 4.85/10 based on 18 reviews.[5] Dread Central's Steve Barton gave the film a 3 out of 5 stars and said, "Fans of Malevolence will most likely eat this one up because it truly plays like one person's nightmarish descent into a world of total madness. It gives you a feel for who Martin Bristol is and why he's so lethal. On that level, the film is a complete success. We just wish there was an equally as successful editor to go along with it."[6] Conversely, Paul Brunick of The New York Times criticized the film's emphasis on violence, commenting that "The excruciating acts of violence are somewhat offset by Mr. Mena's pictorial grace notes: the rustling landscapes of amber wheat, the detailed Americana of rural homesteads. But frankly, I'd sooner touch a nine-volt battery to my tongue than sit through this film again."[7]

References

  1. Bereavement 2010 Box Office Mojo
  2. "Long Island International Film Expo". Long Island International Film Expo. Archived from the original on July 10, 2012. Retrieved September 23, 2010.
  3. Gingold, Michael (February 2, 2010). "Director's update on Malevolence sequel Bereavement". Fangoria. Retrieved September 24, 2010.
  4. "Malevolence 2 - Bereavement". Malevolence. Retrieved June 13, 2020.
  5. "Bereavement". Rotten Tomatoes. Retrieved September 26, 2019.
  6. Barton, Steve (March 3, 2011). "Bereavement". Dread Central. Retrieved December 4, 2013.
  7. Brunick, Paul (March 17, 2011). "'Bereavement' by Stevan Mena". The New York Times. Retrieved February 28, 2019.
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