THE NIGHT HOUSE
(January 2020)
TRICK IT,
DON’T LISTEN TO IT
In The Night
House--David Bruckner’s follow-up to The Ritual--Rebecca Hall plays recently widowed Beth Parchin, whose barely
bottled-up anger at the sudden and initially inexplicable death of her husband
gradually erodes in the face of a dark and sinister mystery.
It’s a testament to the skills and talent of
Bruckner and Hall, as well as the elegant screenplay by Ben Collins and Luke
Piotrowski (all four are also Executive Producers on this), that The Night House remains compelling and
absorbing, as said mystery slowly unpacks itself over the course of the film’s
running time.
It’s also a sneaky one, this, its largely serene
and placid façade belying a cold cruelty beating at its core, the action
onscreen the calm surface beneath which vicious riptides and undertows swirl.
Or, to use another apt metaphor, our eyes are drawn to the beauty of the structure, which only serves to mask the cold, blank hollows at its foundation.
This is quite possibly the most gently nihilistic
horror film I’ve come across.
It doesn’t hold the audience’s hand, nor does it offer any comforting, yet ultimately hollow platitudes regarding existence and mortality.
If this sounds like the kind of horror you’re in
the mood for, then by all means, please step into The Night House.
Just be sure to leave the door open, in case you decide on a hasty retreat…
“Makes you
wonder though, doesn’t it? What else didn’t I know?”
Parting Shot:
The fact that architecture and geometric spaces play a not insignificant part in The Night House bodes well for the Hellraiser reboot Bruckner is currently in post-production on, from a screenplay credited to Collins, Piotrowski, and David Goyer (also, incidentally enough, a producer on The Night House).
Plus! Jamie Clayton as Pinhead!
(The Night
House OS courtesy of impawards.com.)
Or, to use another apt metaphor, our eyes are drawn to the beauty of the structure, which only serves to mask the cold, blank hollows at its foundation.
It doesn’t hold the audience’s hand, nor does it offer any comforting, yet ultimately hollow platitudes regarding existence and mortality.
Just be sure to leave the door open, in case you decide on a hasty retreat…
The fact that architecture and geometric spaces play a not insignificant part in The Night House bodes well for the Hellraiser reboot Bruckner is currently in post-production on, from a screenplay credited to Collins, Piotrowski, and David Goyer (also, incidentally enough, a producer on The Night House).
Plus! Jamie Clayton as Pinhead!
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