Thursday, 28 November 2024

 

Coda/Symphony of Evil-1987, Australia, TV movie, 99 minutes

 

A curious hybrid of slasher and the mystery-suspense genre in the tradition of Hitchcock (the director Craig Lahiff himself described the movie as 'Hitchcokian'), Coda has been influenced by many styles and genres, most noticeably the American ‘stalk and kill’ movies and the Italian giallo movies. Of the American slasher movies, the most obvious suggestion is Halloween, starting from the creepy wax mask worn by the killer along with his almost phantom presence, where he appears and disappears at will within microseconds, as also the supernatural ability to resurrect after being badly wounded. The giallo influence is noticeable in the heavy reliance on music, be it the atmospheric soundtrack to the music college setting (reminded me of Dario Argento's Inferno, where a music student is pushed into a bizarre set of supernatural killings linked to her building), the picturesque settings and use of airy, architecturally magnificent villas. There is reference to noir films as well, with the well-constructed use of light and shadow in corridors and spiral staircases, where a cat and mouse chase ensues between the killer and the victim.

 

That said, the movie does not play out as a traditional slasher, since the body count is relatively low and gore is virtually non-existent except in the slaying of Sgt. Turner where throat and back stabbing is clearly shown. The first killing happens to a music student Anna who is thrown off from her apartment on the college campus. The police target the wrong killer who was at the wrong place at the wrong time, and the suspenseful chase ensues between this person and the police, culminating in a lost key which may be the centre of the mystery. Thereafter, the protagonist Kate, who happens to be the wife of the wrong suspect Mike, is targeted by the killer, as she attempts to unravel the background and catch the real killer. In between, the director throws in a few red herrings which don't really add up. For instance, the hyped-up lost key is not found to open any important door. If anything, it points at the lesbian music teacher Dr. Steiner who was having an affair with Anna and may be protecting the killer. Similarly, Kate’s stolen car leads to a stalking game at the opera, where the killer simply eludes Kate and her friend Sally Reid after setting up bait.

 If the intention was to kill, then why simply run away after being spotted ? When Kate hadn't even seen the key pointed out by her husband, how did she know what it looked like when she saw a similar one in the keychain of Dr. Steiner.

 

Also, the movie drags quite a bit after the first killing and the sudden, brutal death of Sgt. Turner. Thereafter, it picks up pace towards the last 30 minutes, with the last encounter between the killer and Kate being nail biting. The identity of the killer was not a big surprise, with limited options and the cues provided by the director, with regular shots of the weird and formidable Dr. Steiner staring emptily at people and places, and her unhealthy intentions towards her student proteges. The motive was also not difficult to deduce, with the backstory of a mysteriously disappeared brother of Dr. Steiner, combined with her loneliness and apparent guilt at his obscure fate. 

 

Overall, the film has an offbeat quality about it, due to the mixture of plot elements and genre offerings, and the wonderful settings and music complimented the building sense of dread leading to a memorable denouement. 

 

Coda was released on Blu-Ray in November 2024 courtesy of Australian home entertainment label Umbrella Entertainment as part of a three-movie set, the others being Desolation Angels and the Thirteenth Floor. The disc contains a trailer, Interview with cinematographer David Foreman, interview with actor Liddy Clark (who played Kate’s geologist friend Sally Field in the movie), two short films by the director Craig Lahiff, and an audio commentary with production designer Anni Browning, assistant director Gus Howard and actress Liddy Clark.