Moon Garden (2023)

Direction: Ryan Stevens Harris
Country: USA 

Moon Garden, the daring sophomore feature by Ryan Stevens Harris, is a freakish visual delight told from an unconventional perspective. Redolent of works by Jan Svankmajer, Guillermo del Toro and Tim Burton, the film follows a sweet 5-year-old girl, Emma (Haven Lee Harris), who wanders through a scary subconscious realm filled with dark phantasmagoria while trying to leave a comatose state.

The girl is often encouraged by whispered messages from her parents (Augie Duke and Brionne Davis), who are locked in an unhappy marriage. She avoids coming across invisible entities and grotesque monsters with teeth that seem to claim her soul, but occasionally bumps into sinister men whose intentions are uncertain. Once in a while, her mind erupts at the surface, recalling past moments of love and self-confidence. This gives her the strength and courage to keep going. 

A simple story at the core opens up vast possibilities for experimentation, and the director, who has been working as an editor since his feature debut - Virus X (2010) - finds some magical love among petrifying horror and chaos. The inventiveness of detail makes it a sensory experience; one of those that is hard to stay laser-focused as the screen gets crammed with such a proliferation of bizarre elements. 

With warped sounds enhancing the industrialism of the setting, this twisted fairytale is pretty darn hypnotic.