The Autopsy of Jane Doe | |
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Directed by | André Øvredal |
Produced by |
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Written by | |
Starring |
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Music by | |
Cinematography | Roman Osin |
Edited by | Patrick Larsgaard |
Production company | |
Distributed by | IFC Midnight |
Release date | |
Running time | 86 minutes |
Country | United Kingdom United States[1] |
Language | English |
Box office | $6 million[2] |
The Autopsy of Jane Doe Official Trailer 2 (2016) - Emile Hirsch Movie Cox and Hirsch play father and son coroners who receive a mysterious homicide victim with no apparent cause of death.
The Autopsy of Jane Doe is a 2016 supernatural horror film directed by André Øvredal. It stars Emile Hirsch and Brian Cox as father-and-son coroners who experience supernatural phenomena while examining the body of an unidentified woman (hence named Jane Doe) (played by Olwen Kelly). It premiered at the Toronto International Film Festival on September 9, 2016, and was released on December 21. It is Øvredal's first English-language film.
The corpse of an unidentified woman is found at the scene of a bloody multiple homicide. The sheriff finds no signs of forced entry, and a deputy suggests that the victims were trying to escape.
Emma visits her boyfriend, Austin, and his father, Tommy, a small town coroner. Tommy explains that coroners in the past used to tie bells to bodies to ensure they were dead, not comatose. The sheriff arrives with the mysterious body of Jane Doe, and tells Tommy that he needs the cause of death by morning. Austin postpones his date with Emma to help Tommy, promising to meet her later that evening.
Tommy and Austin perform the autopsy and quickly become confused. There are no external visible signs of trauma, but her wrist and ankle bones had been shattered. Her tongue has been crudely cut out, one of her molars is missing, her lungs are blackened as though she had suffered third degree burns, and her internal organs reveal numerous cuts and scarring. Jimsonweed, a paralyzing agent not native to the area, is found in her stomach. The condition of much of the body suggests that death had just occurred, while cloudiness of the corpse's eyes suggests she has been dead for several days.
Other mysterious events occur. The radio spontaneously changes stations, frequently settling on the song 'Open Up Your Heart (And Let the Sunshine In)', and Austin believes he sees people standing in the morgue's hallway. Investigating, he finds their cat mortally wounded.
Tommy finds the woman's missing tooth wrapped in a piece of cloth in her stomach. The cloth has Roman numerals, letters, and an odd diagram. Similar symbols are found on the inside of her skin. The lights in the room suddenly explode. During the confusion, they realize other corpses in the morgue have gone missing. They decide to leave, but the elevator does not work and a fallen tree is blocking the exit door. An unseen figure bruises Tommy in the bathroom.
They return to the autopsy room and again examine the corpse. When the door locks itself, Austin hacks it with an emergency axe. Through an opening, they see one of the missing corpses. Unable to get to the cremation furnace, they set the corpse ablaze in the exam room. The fire spreads rapidly; Tommy puts it out with an extinguisher but is disturbed to find the body has not burned. When the elevator turns back on, Tommy and Austin try to escape, but the doors will not close. Panicked, Tommy uses an axe against what he believes to be one of the animated corpses. When he and Austin exit the elevator, they discover he has killed Emma.
Certain that Jane Doe's corpse has been preventing them from finding out the truth about her death, they return to the examination room. Tests determine that Jane Doe's brain tissue cells remain active, proving that she is somehow still alive. Further examination of the cloth determines that the markings refer to Leviticus 20:27, which condemns witches, and the year 1693, the date of the Salem witch trials. Tommy and Austin reason that in their attempt to punish a witch, the Salem authorities instead transformed an innocent woman into a witch, who now wants revenge. Tommy offers himself to the corpse as a sacrifice, hoping she will spare Austin. Tommy's ankles and wrists shatter, mimicking the corpse's wounds. As the wounds occur to Tommy, the corpse's own wounds begin to heal- essentially ending her curse. Tommy begs his son to kill him to end his misery. Austin reluctantly stabs his father in the chest with a knife. Believing he hears the sheriff outside, Austin tries to flee but realizes the voice is another hallucination. Startled by a vision of Tommy's corpse, Austin trips over the railing and falls to his death.
The police arrive the next morning and are confused by another inexplicable crime scene. The corpse, showing no signs of trauma, is taken to Virginia Commonwealth University. During the ambulance ride, the radio plays 'Open Up Your Heart (And Let the Sunshine In)', and the corpse's big toe twitches. Her curse was not completed and will continue to haunt and kill others.
Coming off of the success of Trollhunter, Øvredal stated that he wanted to 'prove something' – specifically that he could do more than found footage style films. He stated, 'It's just a very specific style that you need to get into specifically for that project.'[3]The Conjuring proved to be a spark of inspiration for Øvredal, and he said, 'it was such a classical horror movie that came at a time where all these movies had tried to do all kinds of different stuff and then suddenly it was like getting back to basics'.[4] After watching the film, Øvredal told his agency he wanted to 'find a pure horror script', which resulted in being sent Autopsy.[4] The script had previously appeared on the annual Black List.[4]
Martin Sheen was initially cast as Tommy but pulled out.[5] Although there are some prosthetics used,[3] the role of the corpse, for the most part, was played by actress Olwen Kelly. Øvredal felt that it was necessary to have an actress for the part to help connect the audience on a human level.[4] On some level the decision was also a practical one as Øvredal believes that doing some of the close up scenes with a prosthetic would've been impossible.[4] Øvredal said that Kelly had the most difficult role in the film, and he credited her with making everyone else comfortable on the set. Kelly was the first person interviewed for the role. Øvredal said they performed further interviews afterward, but he instantly knew she was right for the role. One of the reasons she was selected was her knowledge of yoga, which helped her control her body and breathing.[6] Production began in London, England on March 30, 2015.[7]
The production filmed at Home Farm in Selling, Kent, which doubled as the exterior and kitchen of the Tilden family home.[8]
The Autopsy of Jane Doe premiered at the Toronto International Film Festival on September 9, 2016.[9] It was released in the US on December 21, 2016.[6]
Rotten Tomatoes, a review aggregator, reports that 87% of 99 surveyed critics gave it a positive review; the average rating is 7/10. The website's critical consensus reads: 'The Autopsy of Jane Doe subverts the gruesome expectations triggered by its title to deliver a smart, suggestively creepy thriller that bolsters director André Ovredal's growing reputation.'[10]Metacritic gave it a weighted average score of 65 out of 100, based on 20 critics, indicating 'generally favorable reviews'.[11]
Dennis Harvey of Variety called it a 'taut, yet often slyly funny scarefest', though he said the climax is unfulfilling.[12] Though he praised the acting, Stephen Dalton of The Hollywood Reporter called the film an 'unsatisfactory compromise' of art-house and exploitation film.[13] Richard Whittaker of The Austin Chronicle wrote that Øvredal 'constructs a sinister claustrophobia', then 'elegantly and disturbingly unwraps the enigma'.[14]
Joe Lipsett of Bloody Disgusting rated it 5/5 stars and wrote, 'Øvredal masterfully balances the requisite gore with some well-earned jump scares and a foreboding sense of doom.'[15] Writing at Dread Central, Ari Drew described it as 'mostly effective'. Drew complimented the acting but criticized the film's exposition and scripting near the end.[16]
Writer Stephen King and comedian Michael Legge have both spoken in favor of the film.[17]