The Levelling | Telescope Film
The Levelling

The Levelling

Critic Rating

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Just finishing up her veterinary training, Clover finds out that her brother has unexpectedly died. Aghast, she returns to her family's farm on the Somerset Levels and quickly discovers it to be in awful condition. Now, she must try to understand her family's luckless situation—and her brother's disturbing death.

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What are critics saying?

100

The Playlist by Oliver Lyttelton

It isn’t just one of the best debut films of the year, but one of the year’s best films, period.

80

Screen Daily by Allan Hunter

It may be modest in scale but the film is assured in both intention and execution, building successfully towards a quietly moving climax.

80

CineVue by Matthew Anderson

The pint-sized simplicity of this acutely well told and acted tale should not be underestimated.

80

Time Out London by Trevor Johnston

A somewhat dour, slightly clenched viewing experience perhaps, but delivered with admirable insight, control, and nuanced subtlety by all concerned. It stays in the mind long afterwards.

80

Los Angeles Times by Sheri Linden

Set on a dairy farm in southwestern England, The Levelling is a modestly scaled, superbly crafted drama with a powerful sense of place.

80

Variety by Jessica Kiang

The Levelling is an intimate story, waterlogged with guilt, grief and blame, but it explores this dark spectrum with such unsentimental honesty that its tiny moments of uplift, when its repressed characters form tentative connections despite themselves, are magnified and moving.

80

Screen International by Allan Hunter

It may be modest in scale but the film is assured in both intention and execution, building successfully towards a quietly moving climax.

80

We Got This Covered by David James

The Levelling is a wonderful first feature from Hope Dickson Leach. Morose beyond measure, but leavened with subtle hope via Ellie Kendrick's superb central performance.

60

Empire by David Parkinson

Unflinching in its depiction of rural reality, this may be a dour drama, but it has been made with sincerity and an exceptional sense of place.