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Asylum

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United Kingdom, Ireland · 2005
Rated R · 1h 39m
Director David Mackenzie
Starring Natasha Richardson, Hugh Bonneville, Ian McKellen, Joss Ackland
Genre Drama, Romance, Thriller

In 1950s Britain, Natasha leads an unfulfilled life as the wife of a psychiatrist. When her husband starts a new job at an asylum, she develops an interest in one of the patients: Edgar, a man found guilty of the murder and disfigurement of his wife. Soon, their connection intensifies and threatens to upend Natasha’s life.

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What are critics saying?

40

Wall Street Journal by

Ms. Richardson and Mr. Csokas are sunk mainly by the script (it's the handiwork of "Closer" playwright Patrick Marber and Chrysanthy Balis) and by their complete lack of chemistry. Still, their performances do them no credit.

50

L.A. Weekly by Ella Taylor

I hope to God that Patrick McGrath's novel Asylum, about a bunch of repressed Brits manipulating the stuffing out of one another in a 1950s psychiatric hospital, is better than the shallowly competent exercise in nastiness that British director David Mackenzie and screenwriter Patrick Marber have made of it.

50

Village Voice by Jessica Winter

Mackenzie and Marber opt for an anonymous viewpoint of clinical detachment, which generates about the same psychodramatic tension as reading the "DSM-IV."

60

The A.V. Club by Keith Phipps

Mackenzie's film could almost use one or two lurid touches in place of its stately distance. Then again, a more stylized approach might have allowed less room for Richardson, whose unsparing performance makes other elements almost irrelevant.

40

Los Angeles Times by Kevin Thomas

It's too over-the-top, too lurid and at times simply too silly to represent any kind of valid commentary on the repressive '50s or the way in which institutions tend to destroy rather than cure. "Far From Heaven," which nailed '50s angst to perfection, Asylum could not be farther from.

50

Entertainment Weekly by Lisa Schwarzbaum

Nothing wrecks the mood of a high-toned British period piece about erotic obsession quicker than an unintentional laugh. In which case, prepare for Asylum to be derailed by snorts in all the wrong places.

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