Redneck Oregon is the hard-livin’, easy-stabbin’ setting of The Green Room, writer-director Jeremy Saulnier’s follow-up to the cult thriller Blue Ruin. Somewhere between a modern-day Sparta and a white-supremacist cult kept insular by its neo-Nazi club owner Darcy (Patrick Stewart), mid-ranking members prove themselves worthy of wearing blood-red laces on their heavy black boots through bureaucratic violence, while kids who may or may not be past their teenage years offer their pale bellies to be shivved for a few hundred bucks. It’s no big deal; they’ve been stabbed before.
A shrugging indifference toward the morality of carnage and a fetishistic but practical embrace of the same give The Green Room its leather-and-silver menace. That naturalistic Confederate Gothic atmosphere is the most distinctive element of the film, an effective if largely predictable nightmare (in a vindication-of-the-formula sort of way) about a burnout punk band trapped in — you guessed it — the green room (i.e., dressing room) of Darcy’s club.

After a taco-shack show in which they each net six dollars, the four members of Cowcatcher (Anton Yelchin, Alia Shawkat, Mark Webber and Callum Turner) ignore their better judgment and agree to play for some proud Aryans. They don’t earn any fans by improvising “Nazis, fuck off!” on stage, but it wouldn’t have mattered anyway — they’ve already seen too much. When they return to the green room, there’s a girl lying on the floor with a scabbard sticking out of her skull; the rest of the knife’s deep in her brain. Darcy and his sad-eyed, approval-seeking protégé Gabe (Macon Blair, who starred in Blue Ruin) need to make sure the band won’t call the cops — and the surest way of making that happen is killing them off. While the aptly named Big Justin (Eric Edelstein) guards the door to the green room from the inside, the band and the dead girl’s platinum-blond-mulletted friend Amber (Imogen Poots) — the only one who knows her way around the club — plot their escape.
There’s a convoluted reason why Darcy refrains from just shooting everyone that’s explained in the measured first act — or maybe not, it’s occasionally difficult to understand the muffled dialogue — so in come attack dogs and machete-wielding henchmen. There’s little more to the plot than the band’s quickly diminishing membership; the more they attempt to explore the club, searching for weapons or protection, the more reasons they stumble into why Darcy won’t let them leave in a well-paced series of reveals. Most of the gore is hidden in darkness, and the maimings the band slowly suffer, which include a nearly amputated hand, occupy a restrained space between realism and rubberiness.

More convincing than the flesh wounds is the film’s masterful rhythm between teasing suspense and controlled mayhem. A small paternal development between Darcy and Gabe is accomplished entirely through Stewart’s stately gravitas, though it’s unfortunate the knighted actor doesn’t have more to do. But best are the small character details that make the band believable. They don’t manage to come through as distinct individuals, but it’s easy to discern a sense of camaraderie among a droll quartet who’ve nursed a lot of hangovers together — and so it matters when band members’ vocal cords become pit-bull chow. Kudos to Saulnier on his third thriller; he’s somehow made neo-Nazis even scarier.
Images via A24
The Best of TIFF 2015 | Exclusive Reviews, Interviews and Videos
The Best of TIFF 2015: Exclusive Reviews, Interviews and Videos
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'The Martian' Sciences All The Science
Matt Damon stars in an outer space thriller by nerds, for nerds. The rest of us can enjoy it too.
Image via 20th Century Fox
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Brian Helgeland on ‘Legend’ and ‘The Wild Bunch’
The Oscar-winning filmmaker reveals which Tom Hardy was hardest to work within a film that stars two of them.
Image via Universal Pictures
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'High-Rise' is an Impressive Erection
An insulated community gradually collapses into anarchy and horror in Ben Wheatley’s slimy J.G. Ballard adaptation.
Image via Recorded Picture Company
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Denis Villeneuve on 'Sicario' and 'Blade Runner 2'
The filmmaker promises to 'take care of' the mystery of whether Deckard is a replicant or a human in his next film, the long-awaited follow-up to Blade Runner.
Image via CraveOnline
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'The Boy and the Beast' is Best of the Fest
Mamoru Hosoda’s unique and brilliant animated fantasy could very well fill a hole in your soul.
Image via Mongrel Media
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Chiwetel Ejiofor on ‘The Martian’
He can about playing a super nerd, but he cannot talk about playing a supervillain (yet).
Image via CraveOnline
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Tom Hardy is Kray-Kray in 'Legend'
Tom Hardy plays identical twin organized crime bosses, but only one of them well, in Brian Helgeland’s uneven biopic.
Image via Universal Pictures
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'The Danish Girl' Flakes at the End
Eddie Redmayne and Alicia Vikander give soaring performances, but this Oscar contender lands with an unexpected thud.
Image via Focus Features
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'Mustang' Isn't Just Turkey's 'Virgin Suicides'
A promising new filmmaker explores the repressions five sisters undergo when they’re accused of sexual indecency.
Images via Cohen Media Group
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Drew Goddard on 'The Martian' and 'Sinister Six'
"It was the epic Spider-Man movie of my dreams," says the acclaimed writer/director.
Image via CraveOnline
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'Body' Makes You Laugh Without Knowing Why
Corporeality haunts three characters in this masterful Silver Bear winner from director Małgorzata Szumowska.
Image via Nowhere
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'Green Room' Has Strong Fear on Tap
Jeremy Saulnier's neo-Nazi thriller is a worthy follow-up to Blue Ruin.
Image via A24
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Superb Satire in 'Chevalier'
The Greek New Wave demands to be viewed with this comedy about hyper-competitiveness turning men into horse's asses.
Image via Faliro House Productions
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'Sicario' Borders on Greatness
From the director of Prisoners comes a gripping episode of narcs and violations.
Image via Lionsgate