An adaptation of Nicholas Hoggโs novel Tokyo, Jordan Scottโs sophomore directorial “A Sacrifice” has all the indications of competent filmmaking. The production design is neat and stately, and the pace is quite brisk. However, the very center of the film is caught up in a mesh of major screenwriting issues. Scott, who has also written the adapted screenplay, seems to have been trapped in key, critical areas of the plot, which she entirely dispenses with in a hasty rush of information, intercutting between various perspectives in the climactic stretch.
The rush and scramble of providing detailed backstories all at once at a juncture in the film thatโs simply too late comes off as an effort to purely cushion the โbig twistโ in the tale. While the predictability of it is up for debate, the twist considerably sacrifices facets of characterization, pulping previously established parameters so as to achieve a swift landing. In a jarring effort to make a whole lot of sense, the twist is dehumanizing and a cold move, coming on the back of a massive dump of revelation delivered with sheer clumsiness.
A Sacrifice (2024) Plot Summary & Movie Synopsis:
Eric Bana essays Ben Monroe, an American social psychologist living in Berlin. He is working on his next book, which delves into the untrammeled power of group consciousness. For his work, he studies a variety of people with potential signs of having rejected the folds of society and retreating into their own shells of isolation. Lotte is one of the girls he talks to. She passionately talks of her unwillingness to belong to a fast-eroding society.
Ben is called by his colleague, Max, to appear at a dreadful site. A group of people killed themselves by taking cyanide and lying on the floor in a mass surrender. It is a colossally shocking scene, one that can require a lot of time to process. Ben is absolutely startled, and this fuels his research even further. It seems to give him a shot of motivation, though he doesnโt follow through on the investigation into the incident much, and that doesnโt proceed with any substantial headway. On the spot, he also meets Nina ( Sylvia Hoeks), who introduces herself as a person who profiles criminal behavior.
Ben is thrilled that his teenage daughter, Mazzy (Sadie Sink), is coming to Berlin. When Mazzy arrives in Berlin, she has a chance encounter with a guy called Martin (Jonas Dassler). He helps her out with luggage, and the two are headed in the same direction. The two exchange numbers and a relationship kindles. The two start going out and become intimate. Ben introduces her to the โenvironmental NGOโ where he works, a community that he calls his family that is led by Hilma (Sophie Rois).
How does the cult function?
Ben lost his parents at a very young age. Since then, he has been living with his grandmother, his sole family. But she dies. He hides this from Mazzy. The space of belonging he finds he has lies with the group. Mazzy is also undergoing a tussle in her relationship with her father. Her parents split up recently. It was on her motherโs orders that her father was compelled to move away. Mazzy struggles to come to terms with the estrangement. She is frustrated and resentful of Ben also because she suspects he might be going out with Nina and is keeping that from her, though he had promised her complete transparency.
Martin inducts Mazzy into the cult. Mazzyโs naivete is a strain on anyoneโs credence of following the storyโs events. Hilma propagates a belief of surrendering oneself to the earth as a form of giving back to replenish and heal the earth, which needs nourishment to sustain itself amidst depleting natural resources. This surrender is affected by suicide. It becomes clear that Lotte, who was found dead in a lake, having drowned herself, filling her pockets with stones, was influenced by Hilma, and it was Martin who oversaw it. However, he didnโt have the heart to see it through and fled, leading to the discovery of Lotteโs body by the cops. It’s through the promise of the family that Hilma lures Mazzy. After a reckless night out at a club, Mazzy is semi-conscious. Martin takes her to the community center.
A Sacrifice (2024) Movie Ending Explained:
Does Mazzy escape the cult?
Mazzy initially doesnโt protest. She is comforted by Hilma, who reassures her that she doesnโt need to feel any shame and that she can fully rely on her. Mazzy is told the group will take care of her. However, when they start forcefully making her drink varied stuff, Mazzy gets worked up and demands to be let go of. It is then Hilma starts using brute force, and the group prevents her attempts at escape. She is sedated, and Hilma orders a reluctant Martin to take her to the lake and repeat what was done with Lotte. Martin does drop an unconscious Mazzy off at the lake, but he doesnโt complete the task. He returns home where his dead grandmotherโs body is still there, rotting, and dies by taking the cyanide.
What was Hilmaโs grand plan?
In its final stretch, the film hurls out a volley of flashbacks, where itโs revealed Nina was Hilma’s accomplice. In fact, she joined the group when Hilma became its leader. She was given over to the cult as a child, with her parents killing themselves under the cultโs influence. Hilma engineered Ninaโs strategy of getting close to Ben so as to recruit him into the group, whereby he could bring the group international renown. Martinโs intimacy with Mazzy was henceforth also carefully plotted.
When Ben lands at the community center and hears the gobbledygook of Hilmaโs ambition, he gets a clue of the lake his daughter might be in and immediately rushes there. He rescues Mazzy, who tries to drown herself. Nina is instructed by Hilma to sacrifice herself, which she does. Along with her, the entire group put themselves on fire, all except Hilma herself, who escapes the burning building. Her plans to expand her group are still in place, as the final scene hints that Mazzyโs friend might be succumbing to the spell of Hilmaโs specious preaching.