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Alone with Her (2006)

 

Meet Doug. Full-time profession: stalker.

In Alone with Her, a film by Eric Nicholas, we get to know just about everything there is to know about Doug. It isn’t pretty, but we do get to realize that Doug is a loser; a loser in relationships, a loser in his approach to life, a loser that, simply put, has nothing better to do than to keep trying at creating artificial relationships with women to boost his superficial ego.

That’s where Amy comes in. She’s just coming off a failed relationship so she’s vulnerable. Just the kind of woman Doug likes: someone he can fabricate a fantasy world of ‘Doug the Magnificent’ around. Maybe shes the one who will buy his fantasy world of perfection, maybe not, but in Alone with Her, we get to watch every sordid detail of Doug’s relentless infatuation with Amy, and how he manipulates her to believe he’s a nice guy; a guy that has lots in common with her. But that’s only because he’s bugged her home and her life, and he’s there every single minute, watching and listening.

We first see Doug as he truly is: a camera stuck surreptitiously in a black bag. He doesn’t go anywhere without it. He sees through it, feels through it, even hunts vulnerable and lonely woman through it. In fact, his whole point of view is always through the camera’s lens, and Nicholas films most of the story that way. We watch Doug through a camera lens as he watches Amy through his camera lens.

He first glimpses Amy in the park as she’s watching lovers get it on. She starts crying. One failed relationship worn on a sleeve to go, please, and that’s the hook for Doug. He’s a sucker for stuff like that. A brief trip to the electronic surveillance store and Doug’s next stop is Amy’s apartment. He rigs it with cameras and microphones to pick up every conversation, every bathroom break, and every personal nuance of Amy’s lonely life.

Through his camera and intrusion into Amy’s life, we’re forced to see and hear Amy as he does. But there’s no voyeuristic pleasure in this because Nicholas also forces us to see and hear Doug as he contrives ‘chance’ meetings with her at the local coffee or spends alone time with her in her bedroom—through a small monitor that he watches constantly. In one chilling moment, Doug puts his head down to sleep as Amy, on the monitor, puts her head down on her pillow to sleep; an indication that he has no life without play-acting himself into believing she matters to him. And when she pleasures herself with the handle of a hairbrush, he’s there pleasuring himself, too, but through the monitor: the epitome of safe sex.

We begin to see the breakable side of Doug when Amy gets a phone call from Matt. Doug hates competition, and anything or anyone that would get in the way of his twisted, fabricated relationship with Amy. More and more, Doug ingratiates himself into Amy’s life. She’s an art student, so he plays that up and helps her with her website. She likes this music or that movie, and amazingly, he likes this music or that movie, too. “Funny how much we have in common,” they say, but it’s not funny at all.

But Doug’s emotional instability can’t stand Matt’s attentions for Amy, so Doug swabs her bed linen with something nasty. One itchy night later, her skin is covered with red blotches, and she tells Matt to cool his heels while she recovers. At this point you also realize that he’s an old pro at this sort of thing. The hairs on the back of your neck should be standing up by now.

Then there’s Amy’s friend Jen, who starts upsetting the delicate balance of Doug’s plans when she becomes suspicious of him. Guys too good to be true usually aren’t that good. During a get-together with Amy, Jen and Doug, he just can’t deal with not having Amy all to himself and begins losing his superficial composure. He breaks down in the bathroom and fakes a phone call to get him out of the apartment.

Doug begins to resort to more interventions to bring him and Amy closer together. He gets her paintings sold, but we aren’t quite sure who actually bought them. He rushes to her side when she steps on broken glass in the dark. He neatly takes care of Jen when she begins to confront him about his past.

Doug the social-nebbish, the electronic felon, the camera creep who needs to fabricate his whole life around a fictitious relationship, is really a monster in disguise. This monster-side of him begins to show itself more and more, and roars to life just when he has the chance at a real emotional connection with Amy instead of one of his contrived events.

Nicholas, who directed and wrote the story, moves his camera, and Doug’s, in a straightforward manner. Occasionally resorting to monochrome tints as Doug’s point of view surveillance shows Amy or Doug himself, Nicholas eschews the sensational and directs the unsettling events in the story with pragmatism. Colin Hanks plays Doug in a low-key, fatalistic way, presenting a depressingly realistic portrayal of this human monster who can’t handle uncertainty or spontaneity in his life.

This low-budget thriller is low-key, but that makes it all the more realistic; and truly horrifying because of it.

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