CineVue by Christopher Machell
Make Up taps into a rich Gothic tradition where repressed emotions find their vent in uncanny space and sexual awakening is realised through the imagination.
✭ ✭ ✭ ✭ Read critic reviews
United Kingdom · 2020
1h 26m
Director Claire Oakley
Starring Molly Windsor, Joseph Quinn, Stefanie Martini, Theo Barklem-Biggs
Genre Drama, Thriller
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Teenager Ruth travels to a nearly deserted caravan park in Cornwall looking for an opportunity to work alongside her boyfriend Tom. A winter holiday by the sea soon spirals into something more ominous when Ruth begins to suspect that Tom may be cheating on her.
CineVue by Christopher Machell
Make Up taps into a rich Gothic tradition where repressed emotions find their vent in uncanny space and sexual awakening is realised through the imagination.
Claire Oakley has created a vivid sensory experience out of limited means. Make Up is anything but cosmetic — it gets right under the skin.
The Hollywood Reporter by John DeFore
Benefitting from an unassuming but dead-on performance by lead Molly Windsor, the picture may frustrate those expecting a true horror film, but earns Oakley a place alongside other young women (like Amy Seimetz and Sophia Takal) currently exploring the usefulness of genre conventions in feminist storytelling.
At under 90 minutes, Make Up doesn’t include much action but the skin-crawling effect of the film reverberates until after the credits roll. The entire technical package — the menacing visuals, the rumbling soundscape, the brief disorienting sequences of flashbacks and dreams — are anchored in naturalistic, understated performances.
Los Angeles Times by Michael Ordona
It’s an insightful, deeply felt film that lets us in on a personal evolution.
The Guardian by Peter Bradshaw
It’s a clever and expertly made movie; Oakley luxuriates in its winter chill.
For all the clammy grip it exerts, this thrillingly original film is more interested in trapping you in its psychosexual maze and immersing you in the relatable pains of self-discovery.
The Observer (UK) by Simran Hans
Eerie images of a bloodied fingernail and long grass lit by amber floodlights signal Oakley’s sly sense of humour and eye for visual poetry.
The New York Times by Teo Bugbee
It’s an intriguing interpretation of adolescent discovery, one that uses horror to suggest the dread that comes with finding a sense of self.
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