THE MOOGAI ★★★
(M) 97 minutes
In Indigenous filmmaker Jon Bell’s new horror movie, the Moogai serves as monster and metaphor. It’s a spirit that steals children, a crime that evokes instant comparisons with the Australian authorities responsible for removing generations of Aboriginal children from their parents to place them in the unreliable care of the state.
Sarah Bishop (Shari Sebbens) was one of these children – taken from her mother, Ruth (Tessa Rose), as a newborn to be fostered by a white couple. However, this makes her one of the more fortunate of these stolen infants. Her foster parents, Annette and Martin (Tara Morice and Nic Cassim), turned out to be kind and loving, and she’s grown up to become a successful lawyer with a happy marriage and a child.
This means she regards Ruth’s reappearance in her life as a mixed blessing. Although she wanted to meet her, she was unprepared for the reality. With Ruth’s traditional beliefs and devotion to Aboriginal culture, she is often at odds with the life Sarah has made for herself.
At this point, Bell’s script seems to be shaping up as a story wrapped firmly around the conflict between mother and daughter, but it soon becomes clear he has a much more complex scenario in mind: a domestic drama-cum-political horror movie decorated with all the nightmarish flourishes that can be had from a well-furnished visual effects department.
The Moogai comes into Sarah’s life after she suffers cardiac shock during the birth of her second baby and almost dies. As soon as she’s home again, the hallucinations and the nightmares start and life becomes a battle to keep the monster from taking her new baby.
For a while, the metaphor works, suggesting the Moogai and the white establishment are coming together in an unholy alliance. The more upset Sarah becomes, the more unbalanced she seems, until her doctors begin to doubt her ability to look after the baby and her young daughter, Chloe (Jahdeana Mary). Even her husband, Fergus (Meyne Wyatt), is persuaded that a short spell in a psych ward might be a good idea. Only Ruth – predictably enough – divines the truth.