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Through a chain of exciting and horrifying events, this film takes after Red Miller and his wife Mandy Bloom. They have a decent coexistence. Thing flip around after a religious gathering driving by the savage Jeremiah Sand wrecked their home and furthermore killed Mandy. Red does whatever he can trying to get the revenge for his wife.
If revenge films are a dime a dozen, then Mandy cost a bunch of dimes. The plot is straightforward but visually, aurally, symbolically, it's a heavy motion picture that may be too much for some audiences to handle.
The film is about nothing-aside, of course, from the sight of a blood-spattered Nicolas Cage gritting his teeth as he rams the sharpened knob of his ax down someone's throat.
The most disturbing part is that Mandy is alluring regardless. Every frame of its picture and every note of its score bleeds anger or sorrow, but even when it simmers with these ostensibly negative, destructive emotions, it does so melodiously.