I'd seen this film at the cinema and suggested that we screen it, and it definitely went down well. I think that anyone who saw it expecting a ghost story would have been disappointed, but in terms of atmosphere, pace and performance it was superb.
The Little Stranger
UK 2018 111 minutes
Director: Lenny Abrahamson
Starring: Domhnall Gleeson, Ruth Wilson, Will
Poulter and Charlotte Rampling
“The haunts of
childhood are revisited in this oppressively macabre ghost story, set in the
miserable austerity of late-40s Britain and in some ways a metaphor for the
nation’s complex sense of sacrificial loss. … The Little Stranger is fluently made and really well acted,
particularly by Ruth Wilson, though maybe a bit too constrained by period-movie
prestige to be properly scary.”
Peter
Bradshaw
In the summer of 1947 Dr Faraday (Domhnall Gleeson) is called to visit a
patient at Hundreds Hall. He knows the place well as his mother once worked
there as a maid but now the place is in decline and its three inhabitants - Mrs
Ayres (Charlotte Rampling), her daughter Caroline (Ruth Wilson) and son
Roderick (Will Poulter) - feel that the house is haunted by the ghost of Mrs
Ayres’ first daughter who had died in childhood.
The film is based on the Booker-nominated novel by Sarah Waters. Despite
the theme of her story Waters had not initially intended to write a ghost
story: rather her intention had been to explore the rise of socialism how the
fading remnants of the gentry dealt with losing their legacies. In this regard
her decision to set the story in 1947 is crucial: the Labour landslide of 1945
allowed Attlee’s government to launch the NHS in July 1948. However both novel
and film, which Mark Kermode accurately described as a “ghostly story” rather
than a “ghost story”, carry echoes of classic ghost stories of the past
including The Turn of the Screw by
Henry James and The Haunting of Hill
House by Shirley Jackson; other critics have also commented on their debt
to novels (and films) as diverse as Rebecca,
Brideshead Revisited and even The
Great Gatsby.
All of Sarah Waters’ novels have historical settings and, with the
exception of the most recent (The Paying
Guests), have been adapted for either television or film. Fingersmith, a complex crime novel set
in Victorian England, was memorably adapted by the BBC with a cast that
included Sally Hawkins and Imelda Staunton; more recently award-winning South
Korean director Park Chan-wook created a critically acclaimed and commercially
successful film adaptation of the same book called The Handmaiden in which he transferred the action to colonial Korea
in the 1930s.
Lenny Abrahamson is an Irish film director who began his career making commercials
before directing independent films about people living on the fringes of Irish
society. His film Frank (2014) (which
also starred Domhnall
Gleeson) a road movie set in Britain, Ireland and the USA received its premier at the Sundance Film Festival and he
followed this with the film adaptation of Emma Donoghue’s novel Room (2015) which received Oscar
nominations for Best Film, Best Director, Best Adapted Screenplay and for Brie
Larson as Best Leading Actress, although during the ceremony only Larson won an
award.
Here is a link to the trailer:
Here is a link to the trailer:
No comments:
Post a Comment