The Little Stranger film review ★★★★★

Aching memories, evocative ghosts, and post-war classism float around Lenny Abrahamson’s new period drama. Unfortunately, none of it leads anywhere

The Little Stranger
Based on the Booker-nominated novel by Sarah Waters, The Little Stranger follows Dr Faraday (Domhnall Gleeson), a local doctor in ‘40s Warwickshire. He is called to Hundreds Hall, an 18th century estate, where the Ayres family resides. When Mrs. Ayers (Charlotte Rampling) senses the presence of her deceased daughter Sukie, ominous events start to happen around the house.

The film is enticing at first – a doctor who’s desperate to enter the upper-classes, an RAF veteran (Will Poulter) who says the house is evil, the other daughter (Ruth Wilson) who’s restless because of her current closed-off existence. The opening scenes are like a classic BBC ghost story: driving up to a spiky black gate, through a gloomy forest, before finally arriving at an estate that’s a phantom of its former glory.



But there’s nowhere to go. Screenwriter Lucinda Coxon builds and builds and builds (Ole Bratt Birkeland’s camera catching every opportunity for a shot of Gleeson looking glum) with the first paranormal occurence happening around 40 minutes into the film. A slow pace is good for a ghost story, but it’s too much for a finale with no payoff.

The Little Stranger is not a horror film, nor a ghost story, nor is there much to be scared of – it’s a period piece that’s as empty as the house it’s based in. It’s nice to see director Lenny Abrahamson (Frank, Room) tackle something different, even experimental, but the result feels like three hours instead of two.


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What The Little Stranger film review
When 21 Sep 18 – 21 Sep 19, 12:00 AM
Price £n/a
Website Click here for more information




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