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spoilers from Saint Maud, including the ending.
Horror as a genre is preoccupatied with female sexuality, and often this leads to rather tired and sexist tropes, which isn t surprising in a male-dominated genre. In Rose Glass feature directorial debut, she pushes against these expectations with the unsettling new psychological thriller she wrote, Saint Maud.
The film stars Morfydd Clark as Maud, a newly devout hospice nurse who becomes obsessed with saving the immortal soul of her dying patient, Amanda (Jennifer Ehle), a famous dancer and choreographer who has retired to the shore of a resort town for the final months of her life. Maud s transformation throughout the film plays with many familiar genre elements – religion, sexuality, and physical trauma – in unexpected ways that elevates the film.
Horror is about that cackling outsider, scratching at your door. The question in the genre is always which side of the portal you’re on. Are you with the community, fighting the threat? Or are you rooting for the monster to break through and savage the dull weight of ordinariness?
From that perspective, Don Siegel’s 1956 film
The Witch, which turns 5, are ugly, oozing mirror images.
Body Snatchers is about how evil alien pod people infiltrate the small, wholesome 1950s California town of Santa Mira.
The Witch is about a good, wholesome, God-fearing family in the 1630s and how much fun it is when their daughter gets to abandon their boring hypocrisy to join a bacchanal of witches. You could argue that between 1956 and 2016, good, wholesome Americanism started to look less heroic and more like death. Eggers’ witches are Siegel’s aliens, but with better PR.