by
Kristin Battestella
We
all know the song, and though campy, the 2014 Lifetime Original Movie
Lizzie Borden Took an Ax
utilizes
juicy performances to flesh out the murderous ambiguity and did she
or didn't she 1892 courtroom drama.
Christina
Ricci (The Addams Family)
stars
as Lizzie Borden, sister to Emma (Clea DuVall) and daughter of the
soon to be bludgeoned Andrew Borden (Stephen McHattie). A messy barn,
biting of luscious
fruits, and Victorian white undies imply an underlying saucy to the
spinster somber and silent dinners – tea time and full skirts make
this largely a women's world with the occasional, overbearing,
intrusive man. Fortunately, hatchets are afoot in surreal visions,
violent inserts, and murderous dreams, toying with our unreliable
narrator and the muddled timeline in a self-aware, campy tone. Talk
of previous crimes, grudges, and disgruntled encounters lay more
motive drama to Lizzie
Borden Took an Ax, rendering
the modern, intrusive
edge with obvious fake outs or teases unnecessary. Though not super
gory, the splatter bash and killer crunch a half hour in do better
than any trying to be hip approach. This case is both well documented
and a logistical mess, which allows artistic liberties and
sensational embellishments on the crowded crime scene, town gossip,
erroneous reports, and faulty investigation. Press hysteria and
exhumed bodies may seem like standard detective plotting, but period
accents and Victorian protocol add to the evidence variables and
questionable bloody dresses. Despite
staying mostly with Lizzie's questionable point of view, Lizzie
Borden Took an Ax admits
its stance via legal briefings and police discussions intercutting
possible whack scenarios for a somewhat coherent frame on the what
did or did not happen crimes. Debates on the unbelievable possibility
of a woman committing such violence counters the scary white male
jury versus little miss demure defense, and witness testimonies cast
doubt on interrogations
suggesting sociopath Lizzie did the the deed. However, Lizzie
Borden Took An Ax does
have some faulty framework – ye olde timestamps onscreen would have
helped tremendously and historical conjecture is used as an excuse to
waver between cool criminal warped and serious horror drama.
Thankfully, this case's moving fast topsy turvy doesn't give us time
to inspect the details, and not seeing the killings outright allows
for hearsay, jury tours of the crime scene, and a slow horror reveal
for the finale.
Christina
Ricci's Lizzie Borden is “a loner, Dottie. A rebel.” She gets up
from the table without being excused, ditches the ironing if she
can't hum while she works, and otherwise spies, lies, steals, or
worse. After all, she's only a Sunday School teacher on Sundays!
Lizzie looks at herself naked in the mirror and wants to go to a
party at night without an escort – such not a little girl anymore
behaviors imply more than just the bucking of Victorian attitudes
when Lizzie gets more up close to her father than her cordial but
prudish, dead woman walking stepmother. She clings to her dad, saying
he wants her to stay with him forever and loves when she calls him
handsome, but questions his suspicious sweat when she hugs him.
Lizzie vows that she will neither be a wife nor a spinster, adding
lesbian innuendo on top of the implied abuses or incest. How long has
she been planning to kill? Lizzie Borden Took an Ax suggests
a long gestating preparation with Lizzie's calculated crime scene
reaction, careful glances, and a practiced playing to the tears.
Lizzie holds up a little too well for the horror that has happened
and is more concerned with how polite the police are or how happy she
will be to live alone with her sister – almost blissfully unaware
of the attributed crimes. These deaths feel premeditated and well
orchestrated, yet crazy cracks show once Lizzie faces some tough
interrogations. She changes her tune and professes her innocence
while dreaming about the killings and resorting to fainting and
sensational courtroom antics. We feel she is faking and she says her
mind is clear, yet the jury can't tell either way. Despite the
misplaced attempt Lizzie Borden Took an Ax takes
with original girl power, button up cool facade, and hip
badass style, Ricci creates a wild-eyed, slick transparency, and
likable, scene chewing performance. Lizzie is a narcissist liar in
action stifled by the courtroom and
confused when she doesn't get her own way, and Ricci clearly has fun
with the party-throwing, attention seeking, and ultimately infamous
heiress.
In
contrast to bad girl Lizzie, Clea DuVall (Carnivale) as
the elder Borden sister Emma is quiet and unassuming. Lizzie
Borden Took an Ax briefly
suspects her and throws shade her way, but Emma is said to be
out of the house helping others when the titular slice and dice
happens. Unfortunately, she soon doubts Lizzie's account and comes to
live in fear of what her sister may be capable of doing. Lizzie
thinks they will be content forevermore in a new home at the top of
high society, but Emma realizes her sister is utterly demented and
locks her bedroom door at night to avoid Lizzie's violent threats.
She doesn't like lawyers visiting the house or so many seemingly
unneeded males entering their little world – again, whether it is
possible abuses or implied feminine preference, Emma seems somewhat
small or shy when it comes to men. Though not the fault of the cast,
those men in Lizzie Borden Took an Ax are
generally styled as inferior to the ladies parade or backhanded to
the little women. We don't have enough time with Stephen McHattie
(Emily of New Moon) as
the gruff and subsequently late Andrew Borden, yet his hands on
innuendo as a potential reason for the crime is felt in those
uncomfortable scenes with Lizzie. Billy Campbell (The 4400)
as lawyer Andrew Jennings, however, provides Lizzie Borden
Took an Ax with the cold facts –
a realistic if circumstantial perspective of the situation for the
audience compared to Lizzie's loon and swoon. Gregg Henry (Hell
on Wheels) as prosecutor Hosea
Knowlton also provides fine legalese, not admissible battles, and
harsh interrogations. At times, the media judgments and sensational
her word against theirs back and forth feels like a contemporary
courtroom drama. However, this famous case was modern, the OJ or MJ
trials of its day, and the support here keeps the case grounded,
balancing the over the top fun of Lizzie herself.
The
carriages, period interiors, wallpapers, fine woodwork, and Victorian
attention to detail also bring the stifling, rugged ye olde of Lizzie
Borden Took an Ax to life.
Bustles, gloves, feathers, fancy linens, and vintage lamps add
upscale alongside mourning fashions and a visual air of
sophistication. Despite congested house crimes, Lizzie Borden Took
an Ax is well lit with
bonus onscreen photography and old camera fun. Arrests and an
overnight asylum whiff suggest the deplorable conditions for women
against the system of the era, but swift cuts and artistic side shots
keep the nudity ironically demure. Although some of the bright
clothing, colorful accents, and modern fashion cuts feel slightly too
contemporary as if the Lifetime millennial audience wouldn't watch
anything too steeped in total historic design, the neckties, cute
hats, and shopping scenes are pleasant, subtle ways to update the
period without being super intrusive. Unfortunately, I cannot say the
same for the modern musical score used in Lizzie Borden Took an
Ax. Perhaps some instrumental
rock edgy rhythms from Tree Adams (Californication)
could have embellished choice scenes, but Southern Rock lyrics are as
out of place as the slow motion musical interlude transition scenes
are unnecessary. Are such tunes fitting for a gritty western? Sure –
but a winking Victorian crime drama about a lady killer? No. This
kind of extra try hard is what ultimately leaves Lizzie
Borden Took An Ax feeling rough
around the edges with no thorough thinking. We're never going
to have a satisfactory definitive on the case so having fun with the
yay or nay is forgivable, even expected. However, it's odd that this
ninety minute telling of the story in its entirety retroactively
becomes the backdoor pilot for the follow up The Lizzie Borden
Chronicles. Had there been a
better plotted progression, Lizzie Borden Took an Ax could
have been all about the backstory potboiler leading up to the
wielding with the 2015 series left to pull out all the courtroom
stops. Instead, Lizzie Borden Took an Ax merely
ends with a hammy tie to the jump rope rhyme – because, come on, we
all knew it was coming.
Lizzie
Borden Took an Ax takes
liberties with the eponymous case and can be confusing or inaccurate
at times thanks to modern music, contemporary shoehorns, and a faulty
need to be cool. The undecided nature of the story plays at both
horror serious and Victorian sensationalism, and the presentation
could have been a much tighter thriller. Fortunately, the
entertaining performances and campy hatchet-work make for enough
water cooler did she or didn't she and yell at the screen debates.
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