Like vines slowly overtaking an old house,
Beastโthe feature debut of writer/director Michael Pearceโmines horror from the feeling of wildness encroaching on civilization. Itโs set on the island of Jersey, a land of lush pastures surrounded by an aquamarine sea, and where authorities are searching for the culprit behind the brutal murders of several young girls. (True-crime buffs might recall that in the 1960s, the British isle was plagued by a serial rapist nicknamed the Beast of Jersey.)
But Beast isnโt really a crime procedural; it centers on Moll (Jessie Buckley), an angsty twentysomething who still lives with her parents and is tormented by flashbacks to a violent episode involving scissors. Beast has many sources of needling tension, but the most gripping is the relationship between Moll, whoโs clearly outgrown the confines of her childhood home, and her cold, authoritarian mother, who treats her daughter like a wild animal that could lash out without proper discipline.
That all changes when Moll falls in love with another outcast, the ruggedly handsome hunter Pascal (Johnny Flynn), who gives her the acceptance sheโs never received from her family. (โYouโre wounded,โ he says when they meet. โI can fix that.โ) But when Pascalโs named as a suspect in the islandโs serial killings, Mollโs feverish devotion becomes a ring of fire that further isolates her.
Soundtracked by an angelic womenโs choir, the filmโs grotesqueโbut completely riveting and scarily believableโtransformation from fairytale romance to psychosexual horror is captured with striking, incongruent images, like that of dirt sullying a white couch or stuffed into Mollโs mouth. Itโs both intoxicating and claustrophobicโa swirling vortex of desire and denial that exposes the wildness behind our most controlled exteriors.
