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The Moor

  • 2023
  • 1h 58m
IMDb RATING
5.2/10
968
YOUR RATING
Bernard Hill, Mark Peachey, David Edward-Robertson, Chris Cronin, Sophia La Porta, Vicki Hackett, and Elizabeth Dormer-Phillips in The Moor (2023)
Watch The Moor - Official UK Release Trailer
Play trailer1:21
1 Video
14 Photos
Folk HorrorDramaHorrorMystery

Claire is approached by the father of her murdered childhood friend to help investigate the haunted moor he believes is his son's final resting place.Claire is approached by the father of her murdered childhood friend to help investigate the haunted moor he believes is his son's final resting place.Claire is approached by the father of her murdered childhood friend to help investigate the haunted moor he believes is his son's final resting place.

  • Director
    • Chris Cronin
  • Writer
    • Paul Thomas
  • Stars
    • Sophia La Porta
    • David Edward-Robertson
    • Elizabeth Dormer-Phillips
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    5.2/10
    968
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Chris Cronin
    • Writer
      • Paul Thomas
    • Stars
      • Sophia La Porta
      • David Edward-Robertson
      • Elizabeth Dormer-Phillips
    • 20User reviews
    • 50Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 5 wins & 2 nominations total

    Videos1

    The Moor - Official UK Release Trailer
    Trailer 1:21
    The Moor - Official UK Release Trailer

    Photos14

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    Top cast16

    Edit
    Sophia La Porta
    Sophia La Porta
    • Claire
    David Edward-Robertson
    David Edward-Robertson
    • Bill
    Elizabeth Dormer-Phillips
    Elizabeth Dormer-Phillips
    • Eleanor
    Bernard Hill
    Bernard Hill
    • Thornley
    Mark Peachey
    Mark Peachey
    • Alex
    Vicki Hackett
    • Liz
    Dexter Sol Ansell
    Dexter Sol Ansell
    • Danny
    Margaret Brearey
    • Tracey
    Trevor Dwyer-Lynch
    • Mr. Hobson
    Velton Lishke
    • Detective
    Duggal Ram
    • Ashad
    Billie Suggett
    • Young Claire
    Mia Vore
    Mia Vore
    • Becky
    Jack Wagman
    • Police Officer
    Mark Williams
    • The Prisoner
    Aatif Ati Zafar
    • Lead Archaeologist
    • Director
      • Chris Cronin
    • Writer
      • Paul Thomas
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews20

    5.2968
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    Featured reviews

    7Reviews_of_the_Dead

    Good Mix of Elements, Needed to be Trimmed

    This is a film popped on to my radar thanks to Keir from Strike Media. I personally got confused at first, because I was invited to the screening in the theater. If I was in the United Kingdom, I would have gone. I was able to secure the screener to check out instead. Other than that, I just knew that this took place on a moor and was in the horror genre for 2024.

    Synopsis: Claire (Sophia La Porta) is approached by the father of her missing childhood friend to help investigate the haunted moor he believes is his son's final resting place.

    We start this in Yorkshire back in 1996. Claire (Billie Suggett) and her friend Danny (Dexter Sol Ansell) go to a local store. Claire wants Danny to create a diversion so she can steal candy. He is reluctant but does it. The plan is to meet in the alley out back. When she goes to flee, a man is in her way. She then goes to the rendezvous spot. Danny never comes out though. Claire takes a chance, goes back inside and asks about her friend. The shopkeeper says the man that came in was his father and took him home.

    It is from here that this fills in the backstory through newspaper headlines. There were children disappearing and it put the area in fear. The time jumps 25 years. The man that was thought to be behind it was arrested. Claire is now an adult. Bill (David Edward-Robertson) seeks her out. He is the father of Danny. He still hasn't given up hope of finding out what happened. He asks if Claire will talk about it on her podcast. She tells him that she doesn't think it will help, but he convinces her that it will.

    She also helps him by going to search the moor where he believes the boy disappeared. These are treacherous. They have a guide, Liz (Vicki Hackett). Bill is also seeking the aid of Alex (Mark Peachey). He uses divining crystals to decide where to search. Interestingly, Alex's daughter is more powerful with her psychic abilities. Bill goes behind her father's back to get her to help. Her name is Eleanor (Eliabeth Dormer-Phillips).

    I'll also say here that Claire interviews different people, which helps fill in backstory as well. There is Ashad (Duggal Ram) and Becky (Mia Vore), who grew up in that era as well. They tell of their experiences. Thornley (Bernard Hill) is also interviewed. He seems like a local expert. He helped with the investigation. It is through him that the size of his moor is truly seen.

    That alone would make things terrifying. There are supernatural elements in play and Bill will put the lives of this group at risk to find the truth of what happened to Danny.

    I think that is where I'll leave my recap and introduction to the characters. Where I'll start here by saying that this runs just shy of two hours. I left plot points due to not wanting to spoil things. What I'll say here though, I do think that there is a good amount that could be trimmed. This feels like someone's passion project and there were things that they didn't want to cut. Don't get me wrong, I didn't hate this. I just wanted to set this up.

    Where I want to start is that I like how we build fear here. It starts with someone kidnapping children. This is every parent's nightmare. The use of newspaper headlines and hearing people tell their stories of that time was good. Something that adds to it is to show the mental state of Bill. He still struggles with what happened. This is something that would be extremely difficult to deal with. I'm not sure if I could move on without knowing what happened to my child. His determination borders on mania. I thought that Edward-Robetson was good at conveying this.

    Then I want to shift over to our lead, Claire. She is interesting to me. I like this opening sequence when we go to the present time. Bill guilts her into doing podcast episodes about what happened that fateful day with Danny. He also wants her to recap their investigation to see if it opens new leads. This is a good set up, because she blames herself for what happened. She was able to move on after Bill let her know all those years ago that it wasn't her fault. That doesn't mean that he doesn't blame her or that she at least thinks that is the case. I like that she knows what Bill is doing is wrong. She should try to talk him out of it. She doesn't though and that affects people in the end. La Porta was also solid in her performance.

    Something that I thought also worked is that we ground this story to start. It just seems like there was this psycho kidnapping children and killing them. There are people who've done this so we connect that. Claire first glimpses that Bill is working with Alex. This escalates when Ellie is brought into the picture. I'll be vague here, but there are archaeologists that come to this place because there are these stones on the moor that have neolithic carvings. It is also disorienting out there. It makes you wonder for a good stretch if it is supernatural before going there. That's where it gets creepy. I do appreciate incorporating in lore like this.

    Let me then finish out with acting. I thought that Dormer-Phillips was good as this young psychic. Her father is shielding her, but she wants to help. She seems to be in control. That is until things get to be too much. This is something that adds to the atmosphere. I like Peachey as her father. He is between a rock and a hard place, which was good. I like Hill as this expert. The rest of the cast rounded this out for what was needed to push our characters to where they end up.

    All that is left then is filmmaking. What I'll say here is that the cinematography is good. I love how they shot and framed the moors. There's an added creepy factor with the fog. They are vast so you can easily get lost. Not to mention there are just ravines and bogs so if you're not careful, you can get stranded and hurt. I'd also say that the limited effects we get are fine for what was needed. There are a couple of sequences here. The sound design was also good. I did have a negative. This runs too long. My interest waned as it feels like there is too much filler. The ending is great and the atmosphere it builds is as well, but the tension was missing at times. I was confused as well from one thing that we saw and to how things play out don't line up for me, which is a bummer.

    In conclusion, I do think that we get a solid film here. I like this idea of a serial killer taking children and how it is believed where he took them was this moor. That is a great setting. It is vast, treacherous and disorienting. I thought that the acting was solid. La Porta, Edward-Robertson and Dormer-Phillips leading the way. The rest of the cast push them to where they end up. The filmmaking is good with cinematography, framing and sound design. I like what they did with the effects. The problem was that this ran too long and I lost interest at times. I think if trimming this to an hour and half, it runs smoother for sure. I'd still say give this one a watch if you want a dark, brooding slow burn with an interesting ending.

    My Rating: 6.5 out of 10.
    7nydjames

    Almost brilliant, and then it tripped over its own feet.

    I'm usually let down by modern horror, but The Moor had me hooked from the start. It's creepy, thoughtful, beautifully shot, and way smarter than most of what's out there. The performances are solid across the board, the mood is tense without relying on cheap jumps, and the folklore elements feel grounded and original.

    But just when I thought we were heading for a haunting, earned payoff...it pivots. One BAFFLING creative choice near the end nearly derails the whole thing. Not enough to ruin it, but enough to knock it down a peg or two.

    Still, 90% of this movie is genuinely excellent. If they'd just trusted the story they were already telling, it could've been a classic.
    8TakeTwoReviews

    Menacing thriller, terrifying on many levels.

    It's Yorkshire in the 90s. It says so on the screen, but the accents and streets give it away. It's a gripping start as a young boy goes missing in a corner shop. I've got instant chills as the jumps and bumps sync with some lovely camera work. As the titles roll, so do the 'missing' headlines, multiple children, a "Summer of Fear". 25 years later. Desolate windswept moors, ominous church bells, quiet streets. In a cafe, Claire (Sophia La Porta) now grown up, is trying to move on from her guilt over what happened to her friend Danny (Dexter Sol Ansell). But the child killer that's suspected took him, is facing release after a botched investigation and Danny's father, Bill (David Edward-Robertson) wants Claire to help him stop it, by finding evidence on The Moor. It plays to a genuine chilling fear. Missing children. Never found. Thought now to be on the moors. No closure. If you're a certain age in Britain, you'll recall the Moors Murders, a horror story that played out in real time. This is why the first act of this hits so hard. When Claire realises the scale of the possible search area, it's unfathomable and even stranger that Bill has deemed now to only search a specific region. There's more to this than first meets the eye. Enter Alex (Mark Peachy) who's helping Bill make these choices based on something beyond. The shots on the moors are fantastic, wide open, the camera laps up the brutal landscape, but as Claire goes searching with Bill and a ranger called Liz (Vicki Hackett), it's her GoPro footage that gets the heart pumping. This first person shot puts you right in the heart of it and gives a real sense of just how dangerous this terrain is in its own right, before adding any sinister layers. We also get interview clips with locals that fill in not only what happened in the Summer of Fear, but how they all feel about its legacy. It's here we meet Thornley (Bernard Hill) and Becky (Mia Vore) a child at the time when Danny went missing. These scenes fill in the space wonderfully and give it real weight. It's Claire's perspective that brings the chills though and it is chilling, terrifyingly so. There's something supernatural at play and this is where Alex and his daughter Eleanor (Elizabeth Dormer-Phillips) come in. They help pinpoint a spot thought to be where Danny is, but it's deep into the moor. Things are going to get dark, very very dark. Honestly I'm going to struggle to sleep tonight. It all starts to take a toll on Claire too. They make some progress, but this only digs them further into the nightmare. The spooky stuff is very effective, but mix it with that natural eeriness of the landscape and the real life horror of missing children and you've got a stone cold thriller. The acting across the board is punchy and powerful, the score is wild and scrungy, the production reaches way beyond its budget. It looks fantastic and it's perfectly paced and really keeps you on your toes. This may well have ruined any future wild camping trips I had planned, it's just as well we're heading in to winter, I need a good six months before I think about spending the night alone in a tent in the middle of nowhere. This is director Chris Cronin's feature length debut. It's a hell of a start.
    7bellapeligrosa

    Creepy gem of a low-budget horror

    This is one to put on the radar for horror fans. It's creepy as hell in parts with some stand-out moments in particular one in the tent towards the end. I imagine this is inspired by the Brady/Hindley murders (horrific enough without a supernatural element). If you've ever visited a moor in England it can be unnerving, easy to get lost and a sense of something old and ancient which is conveyed brilliantly in this film. There's a subtle element of paganism with strange carvings and statues, a part of British history that is still relatively unknown but often pops up in horror novels (Phil Rickman being one), and a faceless serial killer that ups the horror ante. It's slow-plodding in places and if had been a tad tighter it would have been stand-out. The cast are relatively unknown but the two female leads are ones to watch. All in all this was a great find.
    7deloudelouvain

    Too bad the end wasn't good at all.

    The Moor isn't a bad movie but I see there are reviewers on here rating it with a ten and that's just ridiculous. A ten means it's one of the best movies you ever watched, one that you could watch over and over again, and sorry to say this one is far from that. It's a slow burner so do not expect fast action, but there is a nice mysterious vibe to it what keeps you interested. Unfortunately the ending is just not good at all which brings some serious damage to the ratings. The acting was good though, the cinematography simple but not bad. There are also some flaws in the story, bad decision making or annoying moments where they can't decide whether they would continue to investigate or not whilst they get serious clues, which in my opinion was just ridiculous. It's still worth watching if you don't mind a slow pace.

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Won Best Scare at The Total Film FrightFest Awards 2023 with nominations for Best Director and Best Film.
    • Goofs
      In the opening scene when Danny distracts the shopkeeper for Claire in 1996, the tobacco display behind the counter is covered with government regulation doors hiding the display. This was not introduced in the UK until 2015.

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    FAQ17

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • March 28, 2025 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • United Kingdom
    • Official sites
      • Official Amazon Link
      • Production Company
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Those Who Remain
    • Filming locations
      • Yorkshire, England, UK
    • Production company
      • Nuclear Tangerine
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Gross worldwide
      • $2,084
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 58m(118 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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