Pauline (AnnaLynne McCord) is a girl who clearly does not belong in the world in which she lives. I would say she is the product of an overbearing mother — and she is, certainly, to a degree — but there’s something else. There’s just something about her that must be rooted from more than bad parenting. Whatever it is is in her blood, her complete biological make-up — and it makes her say, do and dream in extremely odd, blood-soaked ways.
The cast is great. AnnaLynne McCord plays Pauline with perfection. Instead of being the beautiful rich bitch (cough, cough, “90210”), she physically morphs into this odd creature. Complete with greasy hair and acne, McCord creates cinematic alchemy when she furrows her brow, lowers her vocal register and spews profanity.
I am a fan of Traci Lords and I have to say I’ve never seen her like this before. She’s a mother — an overbearing, pretty broken mother who lashes out at Pauline but also wants to attempt to understand her daughter. It’s interesting and Lords does an amazing job. Other bit parts include Malcolm McDowell as a high school teacher; Ray Wise as the school’s principal; and my personal favorite, king of trash, John Waters, as a PRIEST who tries to counsel Pauline.
Excision is a concise and creepy flick that never loses your interest. While Pauline may not be the empathetic character you want her to be — you know, one you can get behind and root for — she’s certainly one from which you can’t look away. Like a gruesome car crash. As a first-time viewer, you are constantly wondering, “how the hell are they going to end this?” I’ve tried to make this spoiler-free, but I will say this — in the end, you get the sense that Pauline’s reality wins over fantasy and it hits her like a punch in the face. The ending is one of those ‘I-wish-they’d-show-the-next-scene’ kind of endings because it leaves you wanting a little more… closure or clarification. Ambiguity can be a good thing, but once the credits began rolling, my stomach tightened up and I didn’t know what to say. For a movie, this isn’t necessarily a bad thing.
I’ve had about 14 hours to digest Excision. But I have a feeling it’ll stay with me for a few days. Maybe more. Probably more.
