Shudder Spotlight – WHAT JOSIAH SAW, SPEAK NO EVIL, SALOUM, GLORIOUS And RAVEN’S HOLLOW

We might be in the mid-August, dog days of summer, but horror season is just around the corner. Spirit Halloween stores have popped up and are open, Pumpkin Spice Latte are back in shops and grocery stores and on Shudder, the 31 days of Halloween have become the 61 days of Halloween

For horror fans it’s never too early for the spooky season and with that comes these movies to check out on Shudder.

Streaming now – WHAT JOSIAH SAW.

The southern gothic horror movie stars Robert Patrick (THE TERMINATOR), Nick Stahl (SIN CITY), Scott Haze (CHILD OF GOD) and Kelli Garner (LARS AND THE REAL GIRL)

The film is the third feature from American filmmaker Vincent Grashaw (Coldwater, And Then I Go) and world premiered to high praise at the 2021 Fantasia Film Festival and went on to win awards at the Brooklyn Horror Film Festival, Fantaspoa International Fantastic Film Festival, Screamfest, and more.

After two decades, a damaged family reunites at their remote farmhouse, where they confront long-buried secrets and sins of the past. The film is written by Robert Alan Dilts. The standout of WHAT JOSIAH SAW is Nick Stahl’s brilliant performance and looking forward to director Grashaw’s next film.

Read more on Stahl here: https://www.hollywoodreporter.com/feature/nick-stahl-addiction-recovery-1235040926/

Premiering on Shudder August 18 – THE INNOCENTS and GLORIOUS.

Glorious follows as, spiraling out after a bad breakup, Wes (Ryan Kwanten) ends up at a remote rest stop miles away from civilization. His situation worsens after he finds himself locked inside the bathroom with a mysterious figure (J.K. Simmons) speaking to him from an adjacent stall. As Wes tries to escape, he finds himself an unwilling player in a situation bigger and more terrible than he could possibly imagine… The latest feature film from celebrated director, podcaster, and academic Rebekah McKendry (All The Creatures Were Stirring, co-writer of the upcoming Bring It On: Cheer or Die) film comes to Shudder hot off of its widely-praised world premiere at the Fantasia International Film Festival,

During the bright Nordic summer, a group of children reveal mysterious powers. But what starts out innocent soon takes a dark and violent turn in this gripping supernatural thriller.

Streaming exclusively on Shudder – September 15th – SPEAK NO EVIL.

On a vacation in Tuscany, two families – one Danish, one Dutch – meet and become fast friends. Months later, the free-spirited Dutch family extends an invitation to the more conservative Danish one for a holiday weekend getaway at their countryside home. However, it doesn’t take long before things gradually get out of hand as the joy of reunion is replaced with misunderstandings. The Dutch hospitality quickly turns unnerving for the Danes, and they find themselves increasingly caught in a web of their own politeness in the face of eccentric…or is it sinister…behavior.

Directed by Christian Tafdrup, SPEAK NO EVIL opens in theatres in New York and Los Angeles on September 9th

Shudder Original – SALOUM – begins Friday, September 2 ahead of the film’s streaming debut on Thursday, September 8.  A national rollout will follow beginning Friday, September 9.

The film, written and directed by Jean Luc Herbulot (Dealer) was a breakout release of Midnight Madness at the 2021 Toronto International Film Festival, before playing Fantastic Fest 2021, the Red Sea International Film Festival, the Sydney Film Festival, and the 2021 Vancouver International Film Festival.

In Saloum, shot down after fleeing a coup and extracting a drug lord from Guinea-Bissau, the legendary mercenaries known as the Bangui Hyenas – Chaka, Rafa and Midnight – must stash their stolen gold bounty, lay low long enough to repair and refuel their plane and escape back to Dakar, Senegal. When they take refuge at a holiday camp in the coastal region of Sine-Saloum, they do their best to blend in with their fellow guests; including a mute named Awa, with secrets of her own, and a policeman who may be on their tail, but it’s Chaka who happens to be hiding the darkest secret of them all. Unbeknownst to the other Hyenas, he’s brought them there for a reason and once his past catches up to him, his decisions have devastating consequences, threatening to unleash hell on them all.

Saloum stars Yann Gael, Evelyne Ily Juhen, Roger Sallah, Bruno Henry, Marielle Salmier and Mentor Ba. The film marks the first production from Pamela Diop and Herbulot’s pan-African Lacme Studios.

Premiering September 22 – RAVEN’S HOLLOW.

The film, premiering at FrightFestUK on August 27 is from director Christopher Hatton and stars William Moseley, Melanie Zanetti, Kate Dickie, David Hayman.

Autumn 1830: A woman hurries home at dusk in an unnatural swirl of leaves. A creature hidden in the woods follows her. That night, in the safety of her cabin, it savagely kills her. Two days later West Point cadet Edgar Allan Poe is leading four others home on horseback when they come upon the horrific scene of a man lashed to a wooden rack. With his dying breath he whispers “Raven’s Hollow”, which triggers a journey Poe must undertake, coming face to face with the terrifying creature that will haunt him forever.

The sixty-one-day celebration starts September 1. Don’t miss out! Shudder.com

THE INNOCENTS – Review

Innocents - 3
Courtesy of Music Box Films

The French drama THE INNOCENTS takes place shortly after World War II in Poland, a story involving the war’s devastation and aftermath, the occupying Russian forces who drove out the Germans, and some cloistered Catholic nuns. As such, it will inevitably draw comparison to IDA, the searing drama that explored issues of post-war communist Poland and identity for a woman raised by nuns. Although both films deal with nuns and post-war Poland, IDA’s story largely takes place years after the war, while this one takes place in 1945, in its immediate aftermath.

THE INNOCENTS is a rare thing, a story set in a war-torn environment but featuring almost entirely strong female characters. French director Anne Fontaine co-wrote the screen adaptation of the true story. Her previous films include COCO BEFORE CHANEL and GEMMA BOVARY, which she also co-wrote.

The central character was based on a real woman Madeleine Pauliac,who was a doctor in an era when women physicians were much more rare. The story takes place in 1945 in Poland, where French Red Cross doctors have been sent to aid in the repatriation of French soldiers and survivors of the death camps. They are just there to help French citizens but are working alongside the occupying Russian army, the “liberators” who drove out the Germans.

Mathilde (Lou de Laage) is a young French intern assisting a French Jewish doctor named Samuel (Vincent Macaigne), when a Polish nun appears at the hospital begging for a doctor. The young nun Teresa (Eliza Rycembel) – a novice, really – is very young, very frightened and very persistent. Although she is not supposed to treat patients on her own (or treat Poles), Mathilde nonetheless agrees  to help, leaving without asking permission. At the isolated convent, Mathilde finds a nun in labor – and five more in the latter stages of pregnancy, all victims of rape by Russian soldiers. Mathilde does not speak Polish but is helped by one of the nuns, Maria (Agata Buzek), who speaks French.

The nun and the young doctor quickly form a tentative friendship. Just as Mathilde is helping against hospital rules, Maria has sent for a doctor without the permission of the convent’s head, Mother Abesse (Agata Kulesza). The mother superior eventually, reluctantly, agrees to the doctor’s help but insists it must be in secret. Although the nuns are victims of rape, the Mother Abesse wants to keep the pregnancies secret, fearing the disapproval of the common people around them and avoiding further attention from the occupying Russians. One baby has already been born, and the Mother Abesse has taken it way to a family, but the young mother’s death in childbirth revealed how little these spiritual women know of the practical matters of childbirth.

Director Fontaine keeps this thoughtful drama moving at a brisk pace, while still allowing enough quiet moments to develop character and for characters to explore complex issues. Cinematographer Caroline Champetier gives the film an austere beauty, contrasting the nuns’ black-and-white habits against the snowy landscape, and painting everything else in muted colors. The film was shot in Poland, with exteriors filmed at an abandoned convent  The old convent lends a sense of age and of  timelessness, appropriate for the long view the sisters take of the world and their faith.

The drama does explore the nature of faith for those who commit their lives to it in a deeper and more unexpected way than one usually sees in film, something that must be credited to the director’s careful research. However this brings us to one of the problems with this worthy but flawed film. While this true story of nuns raped by soldiers is gripping stuff, the film cannot quite decide on its central focus. Is it a tale of faith, of the nuns’ physical and spiritual ordeal, contrasting their experience against the rules of the Catholic church? Is it a condemnation of the excesses of the Russian army, who arrive as liberators but then terrorize as rapists? Or is this a coming-of-age story of a young woman doctor, facing a trial by fire that calls on her do things she never expected and challenging her view of the world? The plot mixes some of all three, which means that it sometimes skims across the topics instead of delving deeply into them.

The real Madeleine Pauliac, on whom Mathilde is based, was not the film’s inexperienced student but the chief doctor of the Warsaw French Hospital. The screenplay was based on her story as written by her nephew Philippe Maynial, after she died in 1946.  Making Mathilde an inexperienced student doctor, who even comments she had not completed her studies when she volunteered for the Red Cross, makes her bold decision to help the more dramatic.

The acting is excellent throughout. Lou de Laage, who had a break-out role in BREATHE, is perfect as Mathilde, where her beauty and innocent look contrast perfectly with the emotional steel she has to find within her self to carry out a difficult task in secret, sneaking out under cover of darkness, where she must evade the Russian army patrolling the countryside. As Sister Maria, Agata Buzek is mesmerizing, a knowing woman with a more worldly life before her spiritual calling. She and Mathilde bond despite their differences, in friendship. At the same time, Maria grapples with her spiritual calling, the demands of obedience of the Church’s rules and her feelings of human compassion and the moral right. Agata Kulesza, who was so riveting as the devilish Wanda in IDA, plays a more opaque character as Mother Abesse, who makes troubling choices which she believes are best for the convent and the other nuns. Vincent Macaigne as Samuel, with whom Mathilde has a casual wartime affair, gives some voice to the Jewish viewpoint, having lost his whole family in the death camps. Discussions between world-weary Samuel and more hopeful Mathilde are used to bring out aspects of both characters, and Samuel also adds bits of dry, dark humor.

THE INNOCENTS is a worthwhile, moving drama about outrages of wartime, survival, and the power of the spiritual in the face of unspeakable challenge.

THE INNOCENTS opens Friday, July 8th at Plaza Frontenac, St. Louis.

RATING: 4 OUT OF 5 STARS

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