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A Wounded Fawn
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| A Wounded Fawn | |
|---|---|
| Directed by | Travis Stevens |
| Written by |
|
| Produced by |
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| Starring |
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| Cinematography | Ksusha Genenfeld |
| Music by | Vaaal |
Release date |
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Running time | 91 minutes |
| Country | United States |
| Language | English |
A Wounded Fawn is a 2022 American horror film directed by Travis Stevens and written by Stevens and Nathan Faudree. It stars Sarah Lind, Josh Ruben and Malin Barr.
Plot
[edit]Kate wins an auction for a statue, The Wrath of the Erinyes, which features the three sisters descending on a male victim. At her home, Bruce knocks on her door and claims he has a client who will pay double what she did for the statue. While the two discuss the piece, Bruce sees an owl-like figure that demands he take Kate's life, and he murders her.
Meredith, a museum curator, is discussing a prior bad relationship with her psychiatrist. She says she has a date with Bruce. Later, Meredith notices the statue at Bruce's home. He tells her it is a replica. Throughout the evening, Bruce and Meredith both experience seeing figures in the house and outdoors. Meredith texts a photo of the statue to a friend, who tells her it's legitimate and that Kate has disappeared. A frightened Meredith requests Bruce to take her home, but he stabs her. Meredith fights back, stabbing him in the eye, and runs away.
Bruce then experiences strange visions of mysterious figures taunting him. One of them is the Owl, whose encounter reveals Bruce has a tumor in his brain, suggesting his hallucinations and compulsion to murder are due to the tumor. Three female figures accompany the Owl, representing Kate, Meredith, and Bruce's murdered girlfriend, Leonora. The Meredith figure asks whether Bruce or his murderous persona, the Owl, selected her. He says both, but she insists Bruce and the Owl are one and the same. The Owl demands a sacrifice must be made, and Bruce commits suicide. As he bleeds out, the Meredith figure watches him.
Cast
[edit]- Sarah Lind as Meredith Tanning
- Josh Ruben as Bruce Ernst
- Malin Barr as Kate Horna
- Katie Kuang as Leonora
- Laksmi Hedemark as Julia
- Tanya Everett as Wendy
- Marshall Taylor Thurman as the Red Owl
- Neal Mayer as auctioneer
Release
[edit]The film premiered at the 2022 Tribeca Festival,[1][2] and was screened at FrightFest London and Fantastic Fest.[2] The film was released on Shudder on December 1, 2022.[2]
Reception
[edit]Critical response
[edit]The film received positive reviews from critics. On the review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes, 96% of 47 critics' reviews are positive, with an average rating of 7.40/10. The website's consensus reads: "Delightfully dark and impressively ambitious, A Wounded Fawn offers a grimly distinctive treat for slasher fans."[3]
Noel Murray of the Los Angeles Times wrote that the film was "really all of a piece in the way it toys with expectations, keeping viewers off-balance. Stevens and company put the audience in the place of both the predator and prey."[4] Katie Rife of RogerEbert.com said that the film was "a film that celebrates art and art history, one that reaches back across the millennia for inspiration and pulls out symbolism that still resonates today", giving it 3/4 stars.[5] Nick Schager of The Daily Beast praised Lind's performance, and added, "Stevens' phantasmagoric horror show embraces the incomprehensible, even as it preserves a tether to the Greco-Roman mythology at its core."[6]
Awards
[edit]The film was nominated for Best Streaming Premiere Movie at the 2023 Fangoria Chainsaw Awards.[7]
References
[edit]- ^ Goldsmith, Jill (April 19, 2022). "Tribeca Festival Lineup Includes 'Corner Office' With Jon Hamm, Ray Romano's 'Somewhere In Queens', More". Deadline Hollywood. Retrieved April 8, 2023.
- ^ a b c Squires, John (November 10, 2022). "'A Wounded Fawn' Trailer – Shudder Original Inspired by Surrealist Art and Greek Mythology". Bloody Disgusting!. Retrieved April 8, 2023.
- ^ "A Wounded Fawn". Rotten Tomatoes. Retrieved April 8, 2023.
- ^ Murray, Noel (December 2, 2022). "Review: Quirky heist movie 'Four Samosas' revels in Artesia's Indian American community". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved April 8, 2023.
- ^ Rife, Katie (December 2, 2022). "A Wounded Fawn movie review & film summary (2022)". RogerEbert.com. Retrieved April 8, 2023.
- ^ Schager, Nick (June 16, 2022). "A Shocking Horror Movie of Feminist Fury and Greek Mythology Wows Tribeca". The Daily Beast. Retrieved April 8, 2023.
- ^ Gilchrist, Todd (January 27, 2023). "Jordan Peele's 'Nope,' Ti West's 'Pearl' Lead Fangoria's Chainsaw Award Nominations". Variety. Retrieved April 8, 2023.
External links
[edit]A Wounded Fawn
View on GrokipediaProduction
Development and pre-production
Travis Stevens, who had previously directed the horror films Girl on the Third Floor (2019) and Jakob's Wife (2021), served as director and co-writer for A Wounded Fawn, partnering with Nathan Faudree on the screenplay.[7][8] The project originated from Faudree's initial draft titled The Furies, which Stevens revised to integrate a setting within the art world and references to Greek mythological figures, drawing from his background in producing independent horror and interest in surrealist influences like the works of Leonora Carrington and performance artist Marina Abramović.[8][9] This reworking aimed to blend serial killer thriller conventions with hallucinatory elements, informed by Stevens' study of art history and folklore as visual and narrative anchors during scripting.[9] Pre-production emphasized practical creative decisions suited to independent horror financing, with Shudder commissioning the film as an original production handled by companies including Barbhouse and Genco Pictures, producers Joe Barbagallo and Laurence Gendron.[10] The low-budget approach, constrained by COVID-19 protocols, included selecting 16mm film stock for its textured, dreamlike quality—inspired by collaborations with cinematographer Joe Begos—and sourcing unique props like a Bagh Nakh weapon to reflect character specifics.[9][11] Casting announcements highlighted Sarah Lind and Josh Ruben in lead roles, alongside Malin Barr, with principal photography completed in time for Shudder's world premiere scheduling at the Tribeca Festival on June 14, 2022, as announced on April 19, 2022.[10][12] This timeline reflected efficient pre-production for a genre film reliant on Shudder's support for emerging horror creators amid limited resources typical of the independent sector.[7]Filming and post-production
Principal photography for A Wounded Fawn occurred in New Jersey, with filming sites including Cresskill, Fort Lee, Jersey City, Lambertville, Montgomery Township, Princeton, and Weehawken, selected to convey remote isolation central to the thriller's logistics.[13] [14] The production was completed prior to its June 2022 premiere at the Tribeca Film Festival, utilizing 16mm film stock throughout to achieve a grainy, tactile texture that director Travis Stevens described as evoking material "you shouldn't be watching."[15] [16] Shooting on 16mm involved 11-minute reels, which imposed strict continuity demands, as exemplified by the credit sequence captured in one unbroken take, influencing the film's 91-minute runtime and controlled pacing shifts.[16] Cinematography emphasized Giallo-like visuals through warm yet menacing grain and practical lighting, while effects for surreal elements relied on on-set puppets, miniatures, and a functional Bagh Nakh weapon—purchased and ultimately destroyed during use—necessitating real-time fabrication adjustments on a limited budget.[16] [9] [17] Post-production editing prioritized scene weight to enable seamless progression from grounded realism to abstraction, with sound design by Matt Davies incorporating layered, psychedelic elements to amplify hallucinatory audio cues without digital overreliance.[16] [18] [19] Stevens' directorial emphasis on collaborative improvisation during principal photography carried into these stages, ensuring technical choices reinforced the film's tonal evolution.[16]Plot
Meredith, a museum curator emerging from an abusive relationship, meets and begins dating the outwardly charming Bruce, who invites her for a romantic weekend getaway to his secluded art-deco cabin in the woods.[15][3] Unbeknownst to Meredith, Bruce is a serial killer whose recent activities include murdering an art dealer to steal a statue titled The Wrath of the Erinyes, depicting the Greek Furies.[3] As the isolated retreat unfolds, Bruce's psychopathic impulses emerge, escalating the situation into a tense thriller marked by violence and pursuit.[3][15] The plot then shifts into surreal, hallucinatory sequences influenced by Greek mythology, featuring manifestations of vengeful entities—including a spectral owl and Fury-like figures—that torment Bruce psychologically and physically.[3] This mythological intrusion underscores a cycle of retribution, leaving interpretive elements of justice and torment unresolved.[3]Cast and characters
The principal roles in A Wounded Fawn are portrayed by the following actors:[20]| Actor | Character |
|---|---|
| Sarah Lind | Meredith Tanning, a museum curator re-entering the dating world after personal hardship[2] |
| Josh Ruben | Bruce Ernst, a deceptive serial killer who targets Meredith[1][2] |
| Malin Barr | Kate Horna |
| Katie Kuang | Leonora |
| Laksmi Priyah Hedemark | Julia |
