- Reviewedfromthe2024CannesFilmFestival.
Unconditional love can turn a home into a haunted house when shared with those willing to use the promise against you. So it is for July, a shy teen who is tormented at school and at home controlled by her more confident older sister September, who keeps her close with acts of protection, delivered with whispered derisions and tugs on her plait. Though born a year apart, the sisters share the kind of disturbing quasi-supernatural bond usually reserved for twin horror, something the film invokes from the opening scene, as September and July’s mother Sheela (Rakhee Thakrar), a fine art photographer, dresses them up as the Grady girls from The Shining (1980). Sheela directs her daughters with a cool detachment as they pose for her photos – examining the sisters’ hermetic world, the one she cannot seem to penetrate, from behind the safety of the cameralens.
Greek-French director Ariane Labed got her start in the so-called ‘Greek Weird Wave’, with breakout acting roles in Athina Rachel Tsangari’s coming-of-age oddity Attenberg (2010) and The Lobster (2015) – and her debut feature, September Says, is an intensely actor-focused film. Adapted from Daisy Johnson’s 2020 novel Sisters, a modern gothic story in the Shirley Jackson mould, it brings the lyrical playground incantations of the writing to life with two skilfully choreographed physical performances from its leads.As July and September, brilliant newcomers Mia Tharia andPascale Kann speak and move almost in unison, their limbs long and awkward with the weight of growing pains. Disturbing teenage experiences are set up almost like Buster Keaton gags: bullies stretch bright pink chewing gum across a doorway as a trap for July while she daydreams down the corridor – September swoops in to save her with a reflex that suggests she’s done it many timesbefore.
Splitting Johnson’s novel in two, Labed structures the film around the ‘before’ and ‘after’ of an unspoken school incident that implodes the lives of the sisters and their mother. The ‘before’ plays out like a genre-inflected episode of Grange Hill, in a nondescript secondary school in Oxford where irredeemable bullies shoot vicious insults at July, and a class screening of a David Attenborough video on animal behaviour provides a clangingly obvious reference to her sexualawakening.
But Labed jolts the audience out of any cosy teen-movie familiarity with the violent thwack of July’s head against metal as she’s pushed into a swimming pool – and the darkly funny sight of a useless teacher trying to fetch her unconscious body with a limp pool noodle. A horrible incident, sure – but not ‘the’ incident, the one that sees July, September and Sheela leave town and hole up in their granny’s cluttered cottage, known as the Settle House (the girls’ father is dead, and mentioned only through cursed words that allude to a history ofabuse).
In the biggest departure from the book, Labed transports the Settle House from North Yorkshire to an unnamed Irish village, a move signalled mainly by the packet of Tayto served in the local pub, and a gaudy image of the Pope seen on the (you’d hope, ironically owned?) flask of the man who comes to install the internet. As Sheela withdraws from her daughters, withholding love and nurturing, the girls disappear into the detritus of the place, layering themselves in their grandmother’s clothes. Meanwhile September’s bossy, childish games with July move closer to threat – “September says eat this jar of mayonnaise”, “September says engrave my name on that windowpane”.
Their relationship is charged by a domestic terror similar to that of Constance and Merricat Blackwood, the reclusive sisters of Shirley Jackson’s novelWe Have Always Lived in the Castle. September wouldn’t spike the sugar bowl with arsenic – but she might convince July she had, then order her to eat it by thespoonful.
The Settle House move shrinks the girls’ world to a snowglobe, its claustrophobia heightened by the atmospherically grainy 16mm and 35mm photography ofBalthazar Lab (who also shot Labed’s 2019 short, Olla), which uses very minimal light as the sisters retreat further into a near-telepathic bond. One sequence of September and July drinking cans on the beach with local teens was shot using nothing but firelight, enveloping the characters in a natural, textured blackness. You can practically taste the cheapbeer.
There’s something of the inventive scrappiness of Luna Carmoon’s Hoard (2023)in the way September Says trades exposition for grubby sensorial experiments and lightly surreal moments – when the kitchen sink is taken over by a conspiracy of lemurs, we question it less than Sheela as she shoos them away. And as with Carmoon’s leads,September and July communicate on an animalistic level – circling one another in a cacophony of growls and grunts to excise feelings about the ‘incident’ they don’t dare sayaloud.
Labed’s film, like Johnson’s novel, understands the creepiness ofsisters – how they practise life on one another, testing out the worst facets of their personalities until they are ready to present them to the world. It knows that sisters do not simply relate to each other – they inhabit one another, branches inosculated by their ability to predict a parent’s shift in mood or describe the very specific components that make up the scent of their family home. They can recount the stories behind each other’s childhood scars – because they are usually the ones who causedthem.