Lord of Misrule
- 2023
- 1h 44m
ÉVALUATION IMDb
5,3/10
2,9 k
MA NOTE
Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueA desperate search for the young daughter of the town's new minister.A desperate search for the young daughter of the town's new minister.A desperate search for the young daughter of the town's new minister.
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Tuppence Middleton Ralph Innes.
This film joins a raft of folklore horror films over the years. To be fair though it was pretty well put together and I liked the pace. You don't always have to have action, beautiful actors, gratuitous violence and cgi..this is just an honest and decent sinister film. Special mentions to Tuppence Middleton who I thought was outstanding and very plausible as the vicar. Ralph Innes played his part very well too. People giving this 9 or 10 of 10 are way off the mark, as are those clowns giving it 1s and 2s. It's a decent effort in a saturated market, and while I likely wouldn't watch it a second time I did enjoy it.
This film joins a raft of folklore horror films over the years. To be fair though it was pretty well put together and I liked the pace. You don't always have to have action, beautiful actors, gratuitous violence and cgi..this is just an honest and decent sinister film. Special mentions to Tuppence Middleton who I thought was outstanding and very plausible as the vicar. Ralph Innes played his part very well too. People giving this 9 or 10 of 10 are way off the mark, as are those clowns giving it 1s and 2s. It's a decent effort in a saturated market, and while I likely wouldn't watch it a second time I did enjoy it.
Starts off with some promise but quickly outstays it's welcome. Ralph Ineson does a good job of playing brooding local Jocelyn Abney but the plot regarding the disappearance of a vicars daughter at a harvest festival thingy has nowhere particularly exciting to go.
Folk horror with its strange pagan symbols and odd country folk with their odd country ways, it's not actually that scary is it?, not in this movie anyway. And it starts to grate after a time.
It reminded me somewhat of a better and rather underrated movie called The Witches from 1966.
Word around the village is the daughter has been abducted by a harvest spirit called Gallawgog.
The mother of the child is played by Tuppence Middleton and she looks suitably anguished throughout and does a good job I thought.
To be honest this was a hard slog and i started to not particularly care what the outcome was. Young Evie Templeton puts in a good turn as the missing daughter, and maybe if your in to Folk Horror more than me you will enjoy it more.
I found it rather washed out and worse , unintentionally funny at times.
Folk horror with its strange pagan symbols and odd country folk with their odd country ways, it's not actually that scary is it?, not in this movie anyway. And it starts to grate after a time.
It reminded me somewhat of a better and rather underrated movie called The Witches from 1966.
Word around the village is the daughter has been abducted by a harvest spirit called Gallawgog.
The mother of the child is played by Tuppence Middleton and she looks suitably anguished throughout and does a good job I thought.
To be honest this was a hard slog and i started to not particularly care what the outcome was. Young Evie Templeton puts in a good turn as the missing daughter, and maybe if your in to Folk Horror more than me you will enjoy it more.
I found it rather washed out and worse , unintentionally funny at times.
In 2023's Lord of Misrule we are introduced to a woman who moves to a small rural English village to take over the church. After the villagers celebrate the Winter Festival, her young daughter suddenly disappears and therefore her search for her missing daughter begins.
The movie is a pagan horror story with a suspenseful atmosphere and some mysterious characters. But sadly the movie mostly falls into some generic plot lines and has no outstanding strengths. There's not much special to talk about that the movie could use to separate itself from the masses. It is directed by William Brent Bell who directed quite a few horror movies before ranging from pretty good to pretty bad and I think this one just walks the line of being average. It's not terrible but also not great either and the movies biggest strength is probably the casting of Ralph Ineson as one of the villagers. However I did like the ending and therefore I overall don't regret watching this. [5,2/10]
The movie is a pagan horror story with a suspenseful atmosphere and some mysterious characters. But sadly the movie mostly falls into some generic plot lines and has no outstanding strengths. There's not much special to talk about that the movie could use to separate itself from the masses. It is directed by William Brent Bell who directed quite a few horror movies before ranging from pretty good to pretty bad and I think this one just walks the line of being average. It's not terrible but also not great either and the movies biggest strength is probably the casting of Ralph Ineson as one of the villagers. However I did like the ending and therefore I overall don't regret watching this. [5,2/10]
It's not a perfect film, but it does a lot right and is worth your time if you like this type of thing.
In line with what I expected from the director - the story is going to be a rehash and not perfect, but certainly nothing offensively bad.
Casting, Directing, general pace is all fine... I notice a few other reviews complaining about the pace - absolutely nothing wrong with it, it's building tension and the general meh of rural life.
The writing, as others have pointed out, is a bit... well traditional Folk Horror... but where is there to go with it? If you've read a few Folk Horror books you'll notice the same things coming up: Harvests and sacrifices - often unwilling. So... complaining that a Folk Horror contains all the required Folk Horror tropes seems a bit odd to me (which seems to be the running trend here).
It leans heavily into Christianity vs The Old Ways, and treats Christianity with a rare respect - the Vicar is not a overtly double standard kiddie fiddler for once, they're a sympathetic character that you can get behind. Some clever steps here: make it CoE and make the Vicar female. Allows an awful lot of legwork to be done in your head.
Does it want to be The Wicker Man, well obviously.
Is it The Wicker Man, well... course not - but what is? You can't compare a Michellin Movie with a midrange offering - you'd be a fool.
The casting is superb, not only Middleton and Ineson, but the supporting cast as well - they carry the middling story a very long way.
In line with what I expected from the director - the story is going to be a rehash and not perfect, but certainly nothing offensively bad.
Casting, Directing, general pace is all fine... I notice a few other reviews complaining about the pace - absolutely nothing wrong with it, it's building tension and the general meh of rural life.
The writing, as others have pointed out, is a bit... well traditional Folk Horror... but where is there to go with it? If you've read a few Folk Horror books you'll notice the same things coming up: Harvests and sacrifices - often unwilling. So... complaining that a Folk Horror contains all the required Folk Horror tropes seems a bit odd to me (which seems to be the running trend here).
It leans heavily into Christianity vs The Old Ways, and treats Christianity with a rare respect - the Vicar is not a overtly double standard kiddie fiddler for once, they're a sympathetic character that you can get behind. Some clever steps here: make it CoE and make the Vicar female. Allows an awful lot of legwork to be done in your head.
Does it want to be The Wicker Man, well obviously.
Is it The Wicker Man, well... course not - but what is? You can't compare a Michellin Movie with a midrange offering - you'd be a fool.
The casting is superb, not only Middleton and Ineson, but the supporting cast as well - they carry the middling story a very long way.
We have a vicar who rarely acts very religious (except in church) and drops F-bombs casually on multiple occasions. Her spouse seems like a bitter atheist and will not pray with her. I mean, they seem more like an average mismatched couple - one theistic, one not - than AN ACTUAL VICAR OF A CHURCH and her husband.
People get angry and then calm down within seconds. They don't have much respect for the vicar and treat her more like a random crazy woman than anything else. The children even start chanting in a vulgar way, gleefully, without a hint of fear or embarrassment at acting that way in front a church pastor.
I feel like Lord of Misrule is a patchwork attempt to mimic other, older horror movies. Like mixing 1970s The Wicker Man with 2000s Silent Hill and a random urinating scene like the original version of The Exorcist.
Lord of Misrule does have atmosphere and lovely folk horror aesthetics yet the writing and character development are significantly wanting.
People get angry and then calm down within seconds. They don't have much respect for the vicar and treat her more like a random crazy woman than anything else. The children even start chanting in a vulgar way, gleefully, without a hint of fear or embarrassment at acting that way in front a church pastor.
I feel like Lord of Misrule is a patchwork attempt to mimic other, older horror movies. Like mixing 1970s The Wicker Man with 2000s Silent Hill and a random urinating scene like the original version of The Exorcist.
Lord of Misrule does have atmosphere and lovely folk horror aesthetics yet the writing and character development are significantly wanting.
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesThe movie features a traditional Irish folk song, "The Tan Yard Slide". The rest of the songs, "Oh, Gallowgog", "Hymn of Gallowgog" and "Lord of Misrule (The Balad of Tobias Bron)" were created specifically for the movie.
- Citations
Jocelyn Abney: Then release me from this pain
- ConnexionsReferences La cité des morts (1960)
- Bandes originalesOh, Gallowgog
written by Brett Detar
performed by Brett Detar, Alice Allen, Geoff Black, Alan Snelling, Katherine Lucas, Maria Jurd, Jenny Larsen & Susanna Starling
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- How long is Lord of Misrule?Propulsé par Alexa
Détails
- Date de sortie
- Pays d’origine
- Sites officiels
- Langue
- Aussi connu sous le nom de
- Володар хаосу
- Lieux de tournage
- sociétés de production
- Consultez plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro
Box-office
- Brut – États-Unis et Canada
- 3 717 $ US
- Fin de semaine d'ouverture – États-Unis et Canada
- 2 662 $ US
- 10 déc. 2023
- Brut – à l'échelle mondiale
- 1 103 427 $ US
- Durée1 heure 44 minutes
- Couleur
- Rapport de forme
- 2.35 : 1
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