The Rule of Jenny Pen | Telescope Film
The Rule of Jenny Pen

The Rule of Jenny Pen

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Confined to a secluded rest home and trapped within his stroke-ridden body, a former Judge must stop an elderly psychopath who employs a child's puppet to abuse the home's residents with deadly consequences.

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What are critics saying?

91

Original-Cin by Thom Ernst

The Rule of Jenny Pen is a dark and deeply unsettling film. Lithgow is unhinged and Rush is the perfect foil to attempt to bring him down.

85

The Daily Beast by Nick Schager

True cinema is John Lithgow terrorizing Geoffrey Rush in a nursing home with his creepy hand puppet.

83

The A.V. Club by Matthew Jackson

The Rule Of Jenny Pen‘s willingness to constantly challenge its audience with shadows and hints rather than some kind of outright horror mythos is one of its great strengths, and Rush embodies that with intense, compelling control.

80

Screen Rant by Grant Hermanns

While the movie starts off on a pretty straightforward note, one of the things that took me by surprise was just how often I was left guessing how the story was going to play out.

70

The New York Times by Glenn Kenny

The director remains near-merciless in his approach, never shying away from showing his vulnerable characters (and the tormentor played with twisted relish by Lithgow is, ultimately, as unprotected as any of the others) in states of utter abjection.

70

Collider by Jeff Ewing

The Rule of Jenny Pen has a lot going for it. Lithgow and Rush pull off strong performances, the escalation of tension is well-developed regarding the scenes taken as a whole, and the central conceit of the doll is used to strong effect.

67

IndieWire by Alison Foreman

What begins as an atypical use of two beloved actors gets more messy than complex in The Rule of Jenny Pen. And yet, the undaunted director, Ashcroft, approaches his vision with palpable conviction.

63

RogerEbert.com by Katie Rife

It could hit harder, however, were its impact not diluted by the overly long runtime and uneven tone. For a movie that undercuts itself for its own amusement, however, intermittently successful is pretty good.

60

ABC News by Peter Travers

This psychological thriller about a demonic hand puppet only works in fits and starts. But watching virtuoso actors John Lithgow and Geoffrey Rush let their freak flags fly as nursing home patients in a fight to the death is a blast of fun and fright to make you squirm.

50

Slant Magazine by Steven Scaife

The film single-mindedly sees its elderly characters as objects of disgust or receptacles for harm.