Taglines: Be careful what you unleash.
Moll is 27 and still living at home, stifled by the small island community around her and too beholden to her family to break away. When she meets Pascal, a free-spirited stranger, a whole new world opens up to her and she begins to feel alive for the first time, falling madly in love.
Finally breaking free from her family, Moll moves in with Pascal to start a new life. But when he is arrested as the key suspect in a series of brutal murders, she is left isolated and afraid. Choosing to stand with him against the suspicions of the community, Moll finds herself forced to make choices that will impact her life forever.
Beast is a 2017 British psychological thriller film written and directed by Michael Pearce, starring Jessie Buckley, Johnny Flynn, Geraldine James, Hattie Gotobed, Charley Palmer Rothwell, Shannon Tarbet, Emily Taaffe, Trystan Gravelle, Olwen Fouere, Tim Woodward and Claire Rafferty. The film had its world premiere in the Platform section at the 2017 Toronto International Film Festival.
Film Review for Beast
ritish TV director Michael Pearce makes a commanding feature debut with this psychological drama-thriller that puts an eerily windswept island location to fine use and features an excellent lead performance from Jessie Buckley, whose open, intelligent face transmits thought and feeling with piercing clarity. Pearce has also written a well-carpentered screenplay; there are some very big scenes and big moments here – sometimes too big – but he gives us a carefully crafted dramatic setup, an intriguingly curated selection of suspects for the crime and all of it building to a fascinating, finely balanced ambiguity in the movie’s climactic stages.
The scene is Jersey, where a serial killer has murdered several young girls; in their tense, clenched way the citizens are carrying on, only rarely acknowledging this elephant of horror in their living room. Buckley plays Moll, a delicately beautiful and unhappy young woman and put-upon daughter (the character reminded me of her Marya Bolkonskaya in the BBC’s recent War and Peace), who has a terrible job that she hates: a tourist bus-trip guide.
She lives at home with her parents, a dad with Alzheimer’s and a fiercely controlling mother Hilary (Geraldine James) who conducts the church choir of which Moll is an obedient member. Hilary treats Moll like a child who needs cold and unfeeling discipline; she doesn’t hesitate to make it clear that Moll is a lesser sibling than her smug brother Harrison (Oliver Maltman) or her manicured sister Polly (Shannon Tarbet), who manages to upstage Moll at her own birthday party by complacently announcing that she is pregnant with twins (Hilary impulsively asks for the champagne to be brought from the garage, and to add insult to injury tells the birthday girl to go and get it). Enraged, Moll runs out on the gathering, which includes Cliff (Trystan Gravelle), the stuffy young police officer who is hoping to make her his girlfriend.
There is a reason for this cruel and controlling treatment, and it isn’t simply the reports of a killer on the island. There is a dark secret about Moll’s emotional life, which explains Hilary’s own behaviour: James’s performance efficiently conveys her gimlet-eyed air of martyred authority. And then Moll horrifies her family, her mother in particular, when she takes a liking to a dangerous outsider with a police record.
This is Pascal (Johnny Flynn) who for all his roughness seems to be the only person with the delicacy and gentleness to understand Moll. He carries a rifle for shooting (and poaching), giving him a hint of Mellors with Lady Chatterley. But there is something very dark about Pascal, and perhaps it has caused darkness to surface – or resurface – in Moll. Soon Pascal is in the frame for the killings and Moll has to decide how far she is prepared to go to protect him.
Pearce is very good at showing the little touches of transgression that this relationship involves: Moll asks Pascal to come to the family home to do some odd jobs, and Pascal, with instinctive truculence, smokes in the house and muddies up the carpet; Johnny Flynn’s performance shows how Pascal is savouring the sense that he has the rights of a disapproved-of boyfriend, and it is by rudeness that he will bolster this position. As for Moll, her troubled, unhappy nature is not calmed in any way by this new romantic excitement. Inevitably, the swirl of criminal violence comes closer to the couple and the film becomes more of a forensic thriller, with police interrogations and tabloid TV intrusions.
The movie comes to a head with a final conversation at a beachside restaurant, an exhilaratingly clever and ambiguous scene in which we must decide what is happening and where our sympathies lie. Beast is a title which might appear to promise horror or melodrama and there is a little of both. But there is always something subtler going on, and it comes from the finely judged performances of Buckley, James and Flynn, and the intelligent, responsive way they are shot by cinematographer Benjamin Kracun and directed by Pearce.
Beast (2018)
Directed by: Michael Pearce
Starring: Jessie Buckley, Johnny Flynn, Geraldine James, Hattie Gotobed, Charley Palmer Rothwell, Shannon Tarbet, Emily Taaffe, Trystan Gravelle, Olwen Fouere, Tim Woodward, Claire Rafferty
Screenplay by: Michael Pearce
Production Design by: Laura Ellis Cricks
Cinematography by: Benjamin Kracun
Film Editing by: Maya Maffioli
Costume Design by: Jo Thompson
Set Decoration by: Candice Marchlewski
Art Direction by: Thalia Ecclestone
Music by: Jim Williams
Distributed by: Roadside Attractions
Release Date: May 11, 2018 (United Staes), April 27, 2018 (United Kingdom)
Visits: 54