Saint Maud

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Live-in nurse Maud (Morfydd Clark) arrives at the home of Amanda (Jennifer Ehle), a famous dancer now frail from illness and trapped in her grand, isolated house. At first Amanda is intrigued by this religious young woman, who provides distraction from her failing health. Maud, in turn, is bewitched by her new patient. But Maud is not all that she seems. She is tormented by a violent secret from her past and by ecstatic messages she believes are directly from God. She becomes  convinced she has been sent to Amanda not simply as a nurse, but to serve a divine purpose. As her grip on reality slides out of control, Maud's care turns into a deadly mission to save Amanda's soul, by any means necessary. (StudioCanal UK)

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Goldbeater 

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English For the vast majority of its running time, Saint Maud is a very well-made and imaginatively shot slow-burning horror art movie that seems to pay tribute to (and also quote) the classic Sunset Boulevard and entertains us with its premise and strong characters. In addition, if it were not for the last five minutes, in which Rose Glass, unfortunately, decides to go off in a slightly different direction than I would have liked, I would almost be impressed. Still, I was satisfied with it and I also appreciated the very audience-friendly running time, which means that no scene in the movie feels longer than it needs to be, or extraneous. ()

POMO 

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English In many moments, Saint Maud is a psychologically focused and visually brilliant story about losing oneself through sliding into religious madness, but which doesn’t develop into anything satisfying in the end. This is a psychological horror flick from the dark mind of a socially perceptive and intellectually highly developed filmmaker, whose aim, however, doesn’t much appeal to me. ()

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EvilPhoEniX 

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English Saint Maud is an extreme slow burn that really hurts to watch, and you can definitely tell that it's directed by a woman. It's a drama for nuns, lesbians, weird individuals, and intellectuals. Saint Maud has very little in common with horror throughout its entire duration, maybe just five minutes at the end, and it lacks emotion and a more interesting story. The protagonist is extremely unlikeable and uninteresting, the pace couldn't be slower, and if you enjoy films where nothing happens the whole time, then please go ahead. This personally offends me. One star for a funny scene in a bar and another for the ending, which at least slightly hinted that we are watching a "horror" film. But it would have been enough for me to watch a 5-minute clip on YouTube instead of being bored for 80 minutes by this religious-lesbian soap opera that sparked as much interest in me as a spider on the ceiling. I might start praying to God because I had planned to go see it at the cinema, but I'd rather be crucified now. Story***, Action>No, Humor>No, Violence*, Entertainment*, Music***, Visuals***, Atmosphere**, Tension*. 4/10. ()

J*A*S*M 

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English Saint Maud is certainly very well made and Rose Glass enters the stage as a director worthy of attention, whose work should be followed. Her debut is a dark psychodrama with an unpleasant, slightly horror atmosphere. I expected that, so I’m not disappointed, but I would have probably been more satisfied with a tiny bit more pure genre joy. Another good thing is the reasonable runtime. ()

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