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Monday, December 30, 2024

MOVIE REVIEW: THE DAMNED

 






















A 19th-century widow is forced to make an impossible choice during a cruel winter when a ship sinks off the coast, risking what's left of the village's dwindling supplies.

Director: Thordur Palsson

Cast: Odessa Young, Joe Cole, Lewis Gribben, Siobhan Finneran, Francis Magee, Rory McCann, Turlough Convery, Mícheál Óg Lane, Andrean Sigurgeirsson

Release Date: January 3, 2025

Genre: Drama, Horror, Mystery

Rated R for bloody violent content, suicide and some language.

Runtime: 1h 29m

Review:

The Damned, Thordur Palsson's feature debut, is an eerie, atmospheric slow burn of a creeper which takes full advantage of its isolated setting and stellar performances.  Palsson film moves at a methodical pace which sets up the characters and their isolated, claustrophobic setting with little fluff or frills.  Eli Arenson’s cinematography is beautifully bleak and foreboding throughout making the icy mountains and frigid coastline characters unto themselves.  The film's pacing may not be for everyone since it moves at a glacial pace with only a handful of increasingly repetitive jump scares breaking it up.  Those looking for cheap thrills will likely be left wanting as this leans closer to Robert Eggers' The Witch as opposed to something like John Carpenter's The Thing even though it still shares aspects of both.  This film is much more a meditation on grief and guilt, themes other "elevated" horror films have covered in the past.  As such, there isn't a ton of new ground to explore but the cast led by an excellent turn from Odessa Young ruminates those themes compelling and engaging.  Young's understated performance carries the film, as she manages to convey the character's exterior steadfastness while she’s slowly fraying at the corners underneath.  Her large expressive eyes deliver a boatload of emotional information as the situation becomes increasingly fraught and tenuous.  It’s a fascinating performance that would have been served better if her character had been better fleshed out in the film's opening since we're given very little background information about her or her companions.  The supporting characters aren't written with much depth, but the entire supporting cast delivers authentic turns in each role giving the group a weathered chemistry that makes you believe they've all lived together for years.  Rory McCann, of Game of Thrones fame, is set up to be a major player early on but for some reason he's taken off the screen relatively early on to the film's detriment.  It’s an odd choice since his presence would have added so much more to the film, especially as it moves into its end game.  Up to that point the story walked a steady tightrope between real and imagined horrors that plague our increasingly dwindling group.  A bit more ambiguity would have helped The Damned be a more effective film but as an opening salvo for his career Thordur Palsson still manages to leave a strong impression.

B-

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