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Saint Maud director Rose Glass breaks down the horror film s searing ending

Saint Maud director Rose Glass on horror film s ending

Prayer breaks into terror in Saint Maud - The Boston Globe

Prayer breaks into terror in ‘Saint Maud’ By Ty Burr Globe Staff,Updated February 10, 2021, 11:44 a.m. Email to a Friend Morfydd Clark in Saint Maud. A24 Films via AP If there were ever a case of a stellar directing debut more poorly treated in the marketplace than “Saint Maud,” I’d like to hear about it. A startling psychological horror story with a breakout performance by Welsh actress Morfydd Clark, the film was the talk of the 2019 Toronto Film Festival, got snapped up by indie distributor A24, and then saw its theatrical release scotched by the pandemic. It opened in mostly-empty movie houses last month (none in Boston) and finally comes to video on demand this week — exclusively on the EPIX subscription streaming platform. Thus the Balkanization of content prompted by the streaming platform wars punishes audiences and filmmakers alike.

How Saint Maud turns a feminist lens on body horror and gives its final girl autonomy

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.  

Writer-director Rose Glass on the holy terror of Saint Maud

Photo: A24 Appropriately enough for a film whose horror is rooted in nightmarish twists on Christian theology, Saint Maud has risen again. Following its buzzy debut at TIFF in 2019, the film which we summarized in our review as “a blend of talky chamber drama, Paul Schrader-esque character study, and visceral body horror” was picked up by A24 and scheduled for a release in March of 2020. Then, well, you know. But now, 11 months later, Saint Maud is finally out on VOD, and our interview with Glass, conducted back in April of last year, is being published. Saint Maud stars Morfydd Clark as the title character, a home nurse in a chilly English seaside town whose newfound piety and new job are the direct result of the film’s enigmatic opening scene, which sees Maud crouched in the corner of a hospital room with her hands covered in blood. Now working in the private sector, Maud is assigned to Amanda (Jennifer Ehle), a retired dancer with only a few months left to live. Closed

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