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Crasse

Original title: Hoard
  • 2023
  • 2h 6m
IMDb RATING
6.5/10
1.5K
YOUR RATING
Saura Lightfoot-Leon and Joseph Quinn in Crasse (2023)
The story follows Maria - a teenager whose mother used to be a hoarder. Now (set in the 90s) she lives in a foster home where a previous resident Michael inspires her to revisit her childhood memories and passions that she has repressed.
Play trailer1:47
2 Videos
10 Photos
Coming-of-AgePsychological DramaDrama

The story follows Maria - a teenager whose mother used to be a hoarder. Now (set in the 90s) she lives in a foster home where a previous resident Michael inspires her to revisit her childhoo... Read allThe story follows Maria - a teenager whose mother used to be a hoarder. Now (set in the 90s) she lives in a foster home where a previous resident Michael inspires her to revisit her childhood memories and passions that she has repressed.The story follows Maria - a teenager whose mother used to be a hoarder. Now (set in the 90s) she lives in a foster home where a previous resident Michael inspires her to revisit her childhood memories and passions that she has repressed.

  • Director
    • Luna Carmoon
  • Writer
    • Luna Carmoon
  • Stars
    • Hayley Squires
    • Lily-Beau Leach
    • Deba Hekmat
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.5/10
    1.5K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Luna Carmoon
    • Writer
      • Luna Carmoon
    • Stars
      • Hayley Squires
      • Lily-Beau Leach
      • Deba Hekmat
    • 10User reviews
    • 56Critic reviews
    • 75Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Nominated for 1 BAFTA Award
      • 9 wins & 22 nominations total

    Videos2

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    Trailer 1:47
    Official Trailer
    Trailer [OV]
    Trailer 1:54
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    Trailer [OV]
    Trailer 1:54
    Trailer [OV]

    Photos9

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    Top cast29

    Edit
    Hayley Squires
    Hayley Squires
    • Cynthia
    Lily-Beau Leach
    • Young Maria
    Deba Hekmat
    • Laraib
    Alexis Tuttle
    Alexis Tuttle
    • Mrs. Norwood
    James Cooper
    • Jeremy
    Saulius Cajauskas
    Saulius Cajauskas
    • Paramedic
    Paul Bassett
    • Drunk Man
    Jenny Bolt
    Jenny Bolt
    • Gold Coin Lady
    Janie Booth
    • Old Lady with Sheet
    Tim Bowie
    Tim Bowie
    • Pete
    Ceara Coveney
    Ceara Coveney
    • Leah
    Sarah Rose Denton
    • Social Worker
    Emily Dixon
    • Girl in Bar
    Nabil Elouahabi
    Nabil Elouahabi
    • Ali
    Sandra Hale
    Sandra Hale
    • Janice
    Pena Iiyambo
    • Ellie
    Erin Jemmotte
    Erin Jemmotte
    • Young Laraib
    Christian Jenner
    • Policeman 1
    • Director
      • Luna Carmoon
    • Writer
      • Luna Carmoon
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews10

    6.51.5K
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    Featured reviews

    7ferguson-6

    can't look away from the mess

    Greetings again from the darkness. I don't know why. I wish I could explain it. So many movies I admire or find intriguing are not the kind of movies that one would describe as uplifting, likable, or even watchable multiple times. The first feature film from writer-director Luna Carmoon is yet another for that category. It's simultaneously compelling and unpleasant - a difficult movie to watch with an unrelatable lead character. And yet, I couldn't turn away. The film won multiple awards at the 2023 Venice Film Festival, so obviously I'm not the only one drawn to this.

    When we first meet Maria (newcomer Lily-Beau Leach), she's dumpster-diving with her mother (Hayley Squires, THE ELECTRICAL LIFE OF LOUIS WAN, 2021). Maria is around 8 years old and it's obvious her mom adores her despite being burdened with an unfortunate form of OCD. Mom is a hoarder-extraordinaire, and each evening she takes her young daughter to the streets to collect items that do nothing but add to the messy collections that make it nearly impossible to open the front door of their now disgusting home. As loving as her mother is, Maria can't help but prank her by hiding the rolls of aluminum foil from her lunchbox. Mom begins to freak out at the thought of used aluminum foil being wasted, and only relaxes once Maria pulls the wads out of her pocket.

    A tragic and bizarre accident leads us to flash forward - with a visually clever transition - to Maria (now played by Saura Lightfoot-Leon, "Masters of the Air") in her final days of school, having lived with (and learned from) her warm-hearted foster mom Michelle (Samantha Spiro, ME BEFORE YOU, 2016) for nearly a decade. Although she lives a relatively 'normal' life now, Maria is a bit lost and unmotivated for the next step in life. Things shift quickly and dramatically for Maria when Michael (Joesph Quinn, A QUIET PLACE: DAY ONE, 2024) shows up. Having been a previous foster child for Michelle, he is now in his late 20's and engaged to be married. Michelle doesn't hesitate to let him move back in temporarily, innocently unaware of what this unleashes in both Michael and Maria.

    This twisted psychological drama reaches new heights (or new lows) as Michael and Maria discover each other on the same wavelength. Maria's repression combines with her reverting to childhood, despite her opportunity to begin again. She finds so many reminders of her mother: a fork, chalk, foil, a bedsheet drying on a clothesline, an iron, and a dumpster, all take her back to the stage which was set early on by her mother. At times it seems like Michael is being whisked away by her, although he is unable to stop their actions. The clean ending of a movie that wallows in messiness may disappoint some viewers, but for me, I found some relief. Filmmaker Carmoon succeeds in making us uncomfortable, yet I couldn't look away.

    Opening in select theaters on September 6, 2024.
    8bohdanascheinostova

    Slightly disturbing with interesting original story and powerful acting performances

    In her directorial debut Luna Carmoon captures extraordinarily how we can be connected to our positive childhood memories and experiences even when they can be seen as strange and even traumatic by some. Essentially "Hoard" tells the story of love - platonic, friendly, physical or parental, and the way it can affect our behaviour and also our personality. But Carmoon decided to show slightly disturbing and sometimes disgusting side of connecting and bonding of two people, which made the whole film more gripping in my opinion. I found this concept intriguing and although there were some themes I would have wished to be more developed, I am really interested to see what comes out next from the mind of Carmoon. I must highlight the debut performance of Saura Lightfoot Leon in the leading role whose stubborn, emotional and fragile yet brave Maria carried the narrative. In the supporting role the new rising star Joseph Quinn proved that he has the talent even for more artistic approach in film-making than just for mainstream production like Stranger Things (his break-out role).
    7TomTalksFilms

    I miss you like the deserts miss the rain

    Hoard is a 2023 Semi-Biographical exploration of unprocessed grief and its potential long term effect on an adolescent.

    It's the feature film debut of Luna Carmoon whose 2020 short film Shagbands I watched prior to Hoard. Both Shagbands and Hoard are gritty dramas taking place in the east end of London with a theme of growing up as a young girl in an area of deprivation. Where Hoard differs however is in its use of surrealist techniques in a few of the scenes. Arguably the easiest thing to write about is your own life but it's in the more surrealist moments where the lines between reality and fiction are blurred. This both helped to keep me on the edge of my seat as a viewer but also added to the main characters sense of confusion and dread as parts of her childhood memories start to come back to her.

    The film spends a good 30 minutes at the start introducing us to a young Maria (around eight years old) and her mother Cynthia. The pair clearly have a deep bond however Cynthia has a severe hoarding problem and it takes a toll on Maria's school life. Half an hour of set up may seem excessive to some however it's crucial to the rest of the narrative that you buy into the two characters strong connection.

    Fast forward a few years and now 16 year old Maria is living with her foster mother. All seems well until another previously fostered child (now an adult) Michael comes back to stay. The pair develop a relationship the type of which Maria hasn't felt since the relationship she had with her mother. This brings up a whole host of emotions that the majority of us would struggle to deal with, let alone a 16 year old.

    If I had any criticisms it's that the film tries to do so much that it couldn't possibly manage to answer all the questions that I had by the time the credits rolled.

    Oh and fair warning there is a Saltburn esc yucky scene.

    That being said, Hoard is a striking debut that has a very real and emotional backbone and is levelled off with this surrealist, visually intriguing style. Luna Carmoon is definitely a director with a big future.
    6CinemaSerf

    Hoard

    The young "Maria" (Lily-Beau Leach) lives with her loving mum (Hayley Squires) in an home full to the brim of junk. Some of it just bric-a-brac, some of it more distasteful and unhealthy, but the pair rub along well enough scavenging their way through skips and bins. "Maria" has a tough time at school and doesn't really fit in, so when an accident at home sees her put into foster care, she has quite a bit of adjusting to do under the care of the savvy "Michelle" (Samantha Spiro). Now we scoot forward to her late teens where she (now Saura Lightfoot-Leon) is still living with "Michelle" and seemingly quite a content. One morning it's announced that "Michael" (Joseph Quinn), who was a former charge, is coming to stay for a while whilst his housing is sorted out. He's a decent cove with a girlfriend expecting a baby. Almost immediately he arrives, the two click. Not quite in any conventional sense, but there does seem to be something between them, and understanding. It's this that starts "Maria" thinking of her past, pining for it even - especially when a delivery man presents her with something entirely unexpected in a small package! With the two of them living increasingly closely, how might their relationship develop? Now this isn't for the squeamish. Right from the start we experience the rather sticky downsides of their quite grubby way of life, and as the story moves to it's second phase it becomes a potent, if shallow, character study of two people that just don't conform. The problem for me here is that the drama goes nowhere. It's a sequence of observations of the life of a woman that I didn't feel I knew on any level at all. Her behaviour is unsettling but it seemed to me that was so that the audience could feel unsettled, squirm in our chairs a bit, rather than because the character of "Maria" was evolving in any way. Indeed she seems to retrogress as the film just becomes increasingly tasteless and contrived. It's rare to see people leave an arthouse cinema mid-film, but they did during this. I didn't, but I am not at all sure what the point was, or to whom this is aimed. It has it's moments and at times is really visceral, but sorry - by the end I found it all just a bit too introspective and dull.
    2SoumikBanerjee1996

    There's no emotional anchor!

    It will turn out to be a visceral nightmare for anyone with OCD, so it's best to keep your distance.

    Now keeping my courteous forewarning aside, this just didn't hit the mark for me, even though I get what they were trying to do, and what they have had in their minds.

    A lot of it comes down to the inefficient execution which focuses way too much on visuals and forgets to build a strong emotional groundwork.

    Even though I like their intent to highlight 'hoarder disorder' and them providing a voice to those affected by it.

    But the real question is, did the story do enough to foster compassion for people dealing with such issues? Or at least help others understand their off-beat mindset better?

    I don't think so.

    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      When Michael jumps out and scares Maria, Joseph Quinn had improvised that moment.
    • Connections
      Features Le tambour (1979)
    • Soundtracks
      Love Makes the World Go 'Round
      Written by Deon Jackson

      Performed by Barbara Lewis

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    FAQ

    • How long is Hoard?
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    Details

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    • Release date
      • June 11, 2025 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • United Kingdom
    • Official site
      • Press release
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Hoard
    • Production companies
      • Erebus Pictures
      • Anti-Worlds
      • BBC Film
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

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    • Gross worldwide
      • $88,244
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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    • Runtime
      2 hours 6 minutes
    • Color
      • Color
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.78 : 1

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