Level 16 Explained

Level 16
Director:Danishka Esterhazy
Producer:Stephanie Chapelle
Michael McNamara
Cinematography:Samy Inayeh
Editing:Jorge Weisz
Studio:Dark Sky Films
Runtime:103 minutes
Country:Canada
Language:English

Level 16 is a 2018 Canadian science fiction thriller film written and directed by Danishka Esterhazy. It follows a group of girls who live at a "school" which educates them about how to be perfect young women for families that they are told will eventually adopt them. Two girls work together to uncover the truth about their captivity.[1] [2] [3]

The plot and overall premise of the film shows many similarities to the 2005 film The Island and Kazuo Ishiguro's 2005 novel Never Let Me Go.

Plot

In an isolated, windowless boarding school called Vestalis, run with strict military precision, girls live on numbered levels and are taught to follow the "feminine virtues" of obedience and cleanliness while avoiding "vices" such as anger and curiosity. They are told that the school protects them from the toxic outside air and that their lessons prepare them for adoption by members of high society, who only want the girls if they are "clean." Breaking the rules results in being taken downstairs for punishment, which all of them universally fear. Best friends, Sophia and Vivien, line up with the other girls on Level 10 to wash their faces in front of a camera in an allotted, regimented time. Vivien steps out of line to help Sophia, who dropped her jar of face cream, and in doing so exceeds her time limit. The guards arrive and Vivien is dragged away, crying and screaming in terror.

Years later, Vivien and others are moved to Level 16 (the final level). She reunited with Sophia for the first time since Level 10. Sophia warns her not to take the daily vitamins, which are actually powerful sedatives. That night, while pretending to sleep, Vivien and another girl, Olivia, are carried to a lounge by the guards. There, Miss Brixil, the facility manager, presents them both to an aging couple, who choose Vivien and make plans to purchase her. When they are returned to their dormitory, Vivien manages to escape into the hall, only to find that the outer door requires key card access. Throughout the night, several others are taken to the lounge and subsequently returned. Miss Brixil, talking to an unseen person on the phone, expresses concern about the behavior of a guard, Alex, warning that he should not be allowed around the girls unsupervised.

The girls meet the facility’s doctor, Dr. Miro, who informs them that a fever has been going around some of the other halls and gives them a "vaccine." The injection gives them painful rashes and causes one girl to have a seizure. He initially acts kind towards Vivien, but when she attempts to share her concerns with him, he realizes she was skipping her vitamins and injects her with a "concentrated" dose. Sophia informs Vivien that Alex, the guard Miss Brixil was concerned about, secretly visits the dormitory and "touches" the girls while they sleep. She plans to wait until Alex comes to the dormitory, restrain him, and steal his key card. Shortly afterwards, Ava reports Vivien for unclean behavior and she is locked in a box for the night. That night, Sophia attacks Alex when he comes to the dormitory; she steals his key card but is captured before she is able to free Vivien.

Miss Brixil and Miro inform the girls that they were unable to find the key card Sophia stole and ask where she hid it. When they are unable to find it, another girl named Rita is taken downstairs for punishment with a warning to the group that each one of them would be punished each day until the card is found. Alone, Miss Brixil and Miro discuss the school’s dwindling funds and the pressure being put on them (ostensibly by powerful criminals) to produce results. During the night, Vivien finds that Sophia hid the key card behind her headboard and escapes, heading downstairs to rescue her. She frees Sophia. They then enter a crude operating room full of corpses, where Rita is found dead, her skin removed. Vivien insists they leave immediately, but Sophia refuses to go without the others. While Sophia goes to get them, Vivien finds a video in the lounge revealing that the facility is actually a rejuvenation clinic run by Miro; the girls are raised in a sterile environment so that their skin can eventually be transplanted onto rich buyers.

Sophia tries to warn the other girls about their situation, but they are suspicious. Vivien brings Miss Brixil to the rest of the group, where she reveals that Sophia is telling the truth. After locking Miss Brixil in the box, they lead the others out of the facility, closely pursued by the guards. During a fight, Sophia is injured, but the two narrowly escape by hiding in a shed behind a security door. When the guards can't open the door, Miro arrives and attempts to manipulate Vivien into coming outside and helping him round up the other girls so he can eliminate her for revealing the facility's secrets; he reveals that their birth parents sold them to the facility as babies. Vivien, aware that Miro only cares about her appearance, cuts her face with the scalpel while a distraught Miro watches. Soon, a group of henchmen lead him away to see their boss, the mastermind of the operation, who orders for his termination for his failure. A gunshot is heard; Miro has presumably been killed for losing control of the clinic. An exhausted Sophia and Vivien fall asleep inside the shed, awakening the next morning to find the door being broken down by a squad of police officers and emergency service workers, who already saved the other girls, aware of the crimes committed by Miro and Miss Brixil. Sophia and Vivien are led to safety. They hold hands while they experience rain and sunlight for the first time.

Cast

Production

Filming

Filming took place in a former police station in Toronto that was built in the 1930s. Esterhazy was given complete freedom to use and adjust the building in any way she saw fit, and used this to create a "very real and gritty" set.[4]

The film was slated to have its television premiere on August 24, 2019 on CBC Television.[5]

Casting

The role of Doctor Miro was portrayed by Peter Outerbridge, an actor who director Danishka Esterhazy had admired for years. Sara Canning, a friend of Esterhazy who played the lead part on her first feature film Black Field, was cast as Brixil in a role that was specifically written for her by Esterhazy.[6] Katie Douglas, who was cast as Vivien, was an emerging young actress who impressed upon her first audition. Of Douglas' performance, Esterhazy said "Every day on set she would surprise me — in the very best way."[7]

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Level 16's brilliant narrative strategy makes for an enthralling viewing experience . National Post . 11 March 2019 . 12 April 2019 . nationalpostreview.
  2. Web site: Level 16 Review . The Hollywood Reporter . 27 February 2019 . 24 March 2019.
  3. Web site: Review: Level 16 has shades of The Handmaid's Tale but loses tension as more is revealed. Now Magazine . 11 March 2019 . 12 April 2019.
  4. Web site: Danishka's Dystopia: A Talk with Level 16 Director Danishka Esterhazy . That Shelf . 14 April 2019 . 15 March 2019 . https://web.archive.org/web/20190414040731/https://thatshelf.com/danishkas-dytopia-a-talk-with-level-16-director-danishka-esterhazy/ . 14 April 2019 . dead .
  5. https://www.channelcanada.com/canadian-channels/english-networks/cbc/cbc-films-celebrates-canadian-features-this-summer/ "CBC Films Celebrates Canadian Features This Summer"
  6. Web site: 5 questions with... Level 16 dir. Danishka Esterhazy . Hye's Musings . 11 March 2019 . 27 February 2021.
  7. Web site: Interview with Level 16 Director Danishka Esterhazy . Clout Communications . 27 February 2021.