Del reviews ‘Undertone’

Image courtesy of A24.
“Undertone” Starring Nina Kiri as Evy, Michèle Duquet as Mama, and Adam DiMarco as Justin. Written and directed by Ian Tuason. 1 hour, 34 minutes. Rated R. Theatrical release.
Plot summary: A podcaster who is caring for her terminally ill mother begins to see parallels between her personal situation and a series of terrifying audio files.
Spoilers: No.
Del’s take
Mladen was unable to join me for “Undertone.” He was in Tennessee, hunting fossils. I’ve told him repeatedly if he wants to find an old stone he’s got my number, but he never listens.
His loss, because “Undertone” is quite a good movie. It eschews the modern approach to horror – jump scares, gore, full frontal monster – and relies on the viewer’s imagination to conjure the deepest scares, reminiscent of “The Innocents,” the Robert Wise production of “The Haunting of Hill House,” and Ridley Scott’s “Alien,” all masterpieces of horror. But where “Undertone” shines is its use of light and sound as a storytelling device.
The story is about Evy (Nina Kiri), a podcaster who is caring for her terminally ill mother (Michèle Duquet). She is living in her mother’s house, a small, claustrophobic relic from a bygone era. At odd hours of the morning Evy manages to squeeze in her paying job, that of a podcaster focusing on paranormal events. She is a skeptic; her creative partner, Justin (Adam DiMarco) is a believer, an obvious parallel to the relationship between Dana Scully and Fox Mulder of “The X-Files.”
Justin has received a collection of 10 audio files from an unknown contributor that are believed to prove the existence of a demon, Abyzou, a creature of European folklore who steals children because she cannot have a child of her own. As the audio files are played countdown-style over a period of days, Evy begins to realize they describe events taking place in her personal life, and her grasp on reality begins to slip.

“Undertone” is rife with subtext – religious guilt, familial guilt, and weightier issues such as Evy’s pregnancy, and whether she should keep the child or have an abortion, and her growing exhaustion in caring for her mother. But “Undertone” is as much a vibe as it is a story. The spooky atmospherics operate like a fourth character. Tuason directs the eye to a darkened doorway behind Evy, as if we should expect to see something there. The house is perpetually cloaked in shadow, just as Evy’s life is at the moment. Sounds reverberate throughout – a clock ticking loudly, the refrigerator cycling on – but there are other sounds heard by Evy – a crying baby, a nursery rhyme played backward that may contain a summons. Are they real? We don’t know. When Evy puts on her headphones, all sound ceases and the silence becomes monolithic. These elements enhance the suffocating milieu of Evy’s predicament and amplify the themes of guilt and isolation.
Nina Kiri is excellent as Evy – she appears in virtually every scene – while Adam DiMarco’s Justin, who appears only as a voice on the phone, is the rational appositive to what may be Evy’s descent into madness. Or is it possession? Again, we don’t know. Michèle Duquet’s Mama rarely moves, but when she does, be prepared for the unexpected.
“Undertone” is Tuason’s first movie and cost about half a million dollars to make. Expect more from this talented writer and director. I appreciated the dearth of modern horror movie tropes and the ingenious use of light and sound to convey dread.
“Undertone” rates a B+, maybe an A.
Del Stone Jr. is a former journalist and writer.
![]()
Leave a Reply