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"Everything Put Together" is a dark and disquieting psychological tale about a woman forced into a
downward spiral after the death of her first child. Her husband becomes indifferent and neglectful, her
friends disown her, and she becomes horrifically insane and emotionally distraught. Directed by Marc Forster
as the precursor to the 2001 award winning "Monster's Ball," the film is an exploration of human fallibility
and bereavement. Suspenseful and satirical, it approaches a modern day suburban nightmare.
Angie and her husband Ross have a picture perfect suburban life: the big house, the cars, and the social
status. Keeping up with the Jones' is not easy in the family friendly community. Like many of her neighbors
and closest friends, Angie is pregnant with her first child. And her relationships and discussions with her
friends revolve only around babies - baby showers, birthing classes, morning sickness, and nurseries. While
pregnant, Angie visualizes a series of disturbing images. But they are nothing to worry about as her doctor
tells her that everything is "perfect." Yet for some reason, she can't help feeling worried. And she has
reasons for concern. Following the birth of her child, the doctor pulls her husband out of the delivery room
to tell him that "his heart just stopped."
Like thousands of newborn babies, Angie and Ross' baby fell victim to SIDS (sudden infant death syndrome). Without
explanation or reason, the two are in a state of sadness and vulnerability. In particular, Angie goes into a deep
depression, insistent on finding a reason for the child's death and blaming herself. As the two struggle to deal
with their loss, the community of friends and family that they had slowly begins to withdraw and turn against
them. With little emotion and consolation from her husband, Angie becomes further isolated, venturing into sheer
paranoia. Will she find the root cause, will she journey back to recovery, or will her new path lead elsewhere?
Similar to Roman Polanski's 1968 classic "Rosemary's Baby," a film that defined paranoia and horror
around pregnancy, "Everything Put Together" is an unsettling drama about the aftershocks parents go
through when their infants suddenly die. Roughly 2,500 infants die each year as a result of SIDS, the
parent's grief unimaginable and the doctor's response lacking rhyme or reason. There are very few
preventative measures parents can take and the end result is a tragedy that impacts everyone involved
forever. Ross becomes distant, Angie goes mad, and the neighbors, unsure as to how to deal with the
matter, become detached and unsociable. Rather than surrounding the grieving couple with love and
concern, the community shuts them out in the hopes that the two can put their lives back together on
their own.
Ever so careful, the film unfolds with startling imagery and a creepy tone that resonates with Alfred Hitchcock -
that awkward forebodingness. The film was completely shot on digital video, which helps build the suspense and
lends a realistic precision to the story. Specifically, each scene is composed in a way that builds a tense
curiosity, from the glassy views of Angie and Ross in the kitchen to the sinister shadows in the nursery to the
claustrophobic hallways of the storage facility. Even the heart-pumping introduction is prolonged and edgy.
Radha Mitchell is captivating as Angie, a normal woman whose world is shattered following the death of
her child. Grasping for some sort of explanation, she turns paranoid and her paranoia escalates into
chaos. Mitchell is a scene-stealer, her expressions so unpredictable. The film also benefits from an
assorted cast of supporting actors and actresses, familiar to most: Megan Mullally of "Will and
Grace," Catherine Lloyd Burns of "Malcolm in the Middle," and Alan Ruck from "Ferris Bueller's Day
Off." Most of the time, I gazed intently at them, wondering if they would break out into their
familiar comedic roles. But they didn't. The voices were different and their roles much more
serious.
Forster does a great job of uncovering the flaws of suburbia, the clique like mentality that persists in urban
neighborhoods spawning class competition. In the film, the social circumstances surround babies. That is, if
you're not pregnant and don't have children, you can't be one of the gang. It's an all too true social commentary
to the extreme. The women are so playful in setting up the nursery in Angie's house only to snub and discard her
after her baby stops breathing.
"Everything Put Together" is an eerie, American nightmare with gritty realism. Unfortunately, it
fails to escalate into a full-blown horror, resolving itself breezily. After building up oodles of
anxiety and nervousness, the few remaining scenes seem much too normal and dismissive, as if the
effects of the child's death have been forgotten and all the antagonism amongst neighbors has been
wiped away. And perhaps that really is the most haunting aspect of the film: a community so
brainwashed with their own set of ideals that one horrific event is not enough for anyone to wake up
and smell the real world.
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