Lizzie

For most, if Lizzie Borden’s name takes up shelf space among other pop culture brain clutter, it’s probably thanks to the morbid skipping rope rhyme: “Lizzie Borden took an axe / And gave her mother 40 whacks / When she saw what she had done / She gave her father 41.” Not that culture has lost interest in the gallows gossip of the Borden legend; Lifetime’s one-two punch of the 2014 television film Lizzie Borden Took an Axe and its 2015 follow-up, The Lizzie Borden Chronicles, a limited series set after the Borden murders, proves viewers like a murderess as much as good old fashioned sensationalism, especially when mixed together.
Lizzie, Craig William Macneill’s take on Borden’s infamy, is no exception to the rule, though it tries its damndest to avoid sensation. This is a serious film in the sense that it takes itself too seriously and in all the wrong ways. Macneill approaches Borden through a contemporary lens: She’s a killer, no mistaking that, but she kills for survival rather than enjoyment. She’s an avenging angel out to punish her wicked father (Jamey Sheridan) for his domineering ways and for crimes of sexual abuse, as well as her stepmother (Fiona Shaw) for her complicity (and simply for being there). As modernized premises for the Borden narrative go, that actually sounds kind of awesome on paper, except that Lizzie hasn’t the inclination to embrace the campy genre quality of that synopsis, playing to respectability instead.
As so often happens when genre attempts to deny its nature, the results frustrate. Lizzie hangs on mood and atmosphere while orbiting its lead, Chloë Sevigny, playing Borden with face set in stone, carrying herself with the stiff poise of a heron. All of her effort is stored in her eyes, but it’s never enough to make the character come alive. Lizzie’s something of a socialite hopeful. She’s on the outskirts of the 1800s “in” crowd, and on the outskirts she stays by dint of Mr. Borden and his patriarchal control over his household and family. Then arrives Bridget Sullivan (Kristen Stewart), a maid newly under the Borden’s employ, saddled with the pseudonym of “Maggie” at the behest of Mrs. Borden. Light suddenly shines on Lizzie’s otherwise somber life.