I just love it: a nice strange story and mood, a fine working cast (Taissa Farmiga and Alexandra Daddario are just to gorgeous in their roles) and a top production - yes, We Have Always Lived in the Castle is not a movie for everyone, but if you like peculiar movies and stories, this one will give you an entertaining time. Good, if you like Stoker or Crimson Peak and such kind of movies.
We Have Always Lived in the Castle
2018
Action / Drama / Horror / Mystery / Thriller
We Have Always Lived in the Castle
2018
Action / Drama / Horror / Mystery / Thriller
Plot summary
After a family tragedy involving arsenic 6 years ago, the remaining 3 still live in the castle isolated from the nearby village. 18 y.o. Merricat shops in the village weekly but it's unpleasant the way many villagers treat her. Her magical spells don't seem to protect her. Her older sister Constance and uncle Julian never leave the property. The sisters' cousin Charles arrives unannounced, not really to meet the family but rather for the money in the big safe. Chaos ensues.
Uploaded by: FREEMAN
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Strange But Good
What a darkly, chilling movie...
Brilliant performances by all involved.
Crispin Glover as Uncle Julian, was eerily calm, but disarmingly charming and the effect was disturbing.
Alexandra Daddario's character of Constance, was both, pitiful, loveable and yet...as Crispin Glover's Uncle Julian character... devastatingly creepy.
Watching her was almost like being privy to a dark secret something like if the Texas Chainsaw Massacre met Leave It To Beaver.
Such a lovely young woman...oh and by the way, she skins people alive, uses their bodies to fertilize her beautiful flower garden and the bones to grind for prize winning bread that wins the local garden club bake sale contest every year.
Yeah...expect to feel like that through the entire film.
An impending something...a pervasive dread that you just can't shake.
Like most eccentric families, they are tragic, and sympathy worthy but I wouldn't get within 10 feet of them.
I've never heard of the author, or the book, but this film was simply amazing.
Wonderful film adaptation of a classic Shirley Jackson short story.
This film is based on Shirley Jackson's classic short story "We have always lived in the Castle", which if you haven't read it you should. In the book, the story is told through Mary Katherine Blackwood's point of view and introduces the reader to an unreliable narrator.
The film did a nice job of following the story from Mary Katherine's, or "Merricat" as she is called, perspective. Backdrop was perfect...the house, the forest, the town. The cast was great...crazy, cryptic, mysterious, manipulative, obsessed, driven...everyone's role contributed successfully to the uneasiness intended with this dark family drama. The slow pacing contributes to the feelings of deep loneliness, longing and ultimately desperation...which build up to a horrific act by "scared" and ignorant townspeople. (Not the first time Shirley Jackson has made social commentary on townspeople and their lack of empathy....her short story The Lottery has haunted me since junior high!)
The acting by Taissa Farmiga as Merricat, was so well done. She successfully navigated this character that is at once protective, loving, sinister and unapologetic. Likewise Alexandra Daddario was brilliant as Merricat's older sister, who played the difficult role of trying to hold on to normalcy when everything is anything but...including how everyone thinks she is the cold-blooded murderer of her own family. Crispin Glover was a delightful surprise as their nearly mad uncle who is obsessed with telling the story of the tragedy of their family...and Sebastian Stan is equally brilliant as the opportunistic, manipulative, money-grubbing, interloping relative.
The director did an excellent job...like the book, of not giving you all the facts, while trying to build your empathy for a character who may ultimately not deserve as much empathy as you think...or do they? One of the ultimate questions of the story.
Slow, beautiful and disturbing this period piece based on a classic is really worth seeing.