EIFF 2012: Kid-Thing

Film Review by Chris Buckle | 21 Jun 2012
Film title: Kid-Thing
Director: David Zellner
Starring: Sydney Aguirre, Nathan Zellner, Susan Tyrell

We are introduced to Kid-Thing’s titular tyke via a pair of scenes that effectively distil the film as a whole. In a dream-like opening, Annie (Sydney Aguirre) watches stock cars smash into one another; shortly after, we see her eating breakfast (a bucket of Froot Loops, spooned with an ice-cream scoop) while reading a story that runs on non-sequiters. What follows combines these two elements: in a string of non-causal sketches, Annie asbos around her neighbourhood, smashing porcelain, shooting cow carcasses with a paint gun, and thieving from the convenience store. Her banal destruction is drolly funny, with brothers David and Nathan Zellner (director/writer and producer/cinematographer respectively) adopting a stylishly detached tone. A Mark Mothersbaugh-ish soundtrack from fellow Austinites The Octopus Project enhances Kid-Thing’s unusual allure, while the discovery of a woman trapped down a pit (voiced by Susan Tyrell, who sadly died last week) adds allegorical mystery, leading to an ambiguous climax likely to illicit groans as well as gasps. [Chris Buckle]

Kid-Thing screens 22 & 23 Jun at the 66th Edinburgh International Film Festival See website for more details http://www.edfilmfest.org.uk/films/2012/kid-thing