Austin Chronicle by Richard Whittaker
Where so many queer creature features attempt to refract and reframe fairy tale tropes, Jae Matthews' script for My Animal is intriguing because there's always the threat of the real world at the edges.
Critic Rating
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Director
Jacqueline Castel
Cast
Bobbi Salvör Menuez,
Amandla Stenberg,
Heidi von Palleske,
Stephen McHattie,
Cory Lipman,
Joe Apollonio
Genre
Drama,
Horror,
Romance
Heather, an outcast teenage goalie in a small northern town, falls for newcomer Jonny, an alluring but tormented figure skater. As their relationship deepens, Heather’s growing desires clash with her darkest secret, forcing her to control the animal within.
Austin Chronicle by Richard Whittaker
Where so many queer creature features attempt to refract and reframe fairy tale tropes, Jae Matthews' script for My Animal is intriguing because there's always the threat of the real world at the edges.
Original-Cin by Chris Knight
Ultimately, what keeps this film from becoming great in either the werewolf or romance department is the way it fails to fully commit to either strain, or to meld them into something new and unique. The ending might even be said to suffer from a case of lupus ex machina. On the plus side, the acting is supurb.
Paste Magazine by Jacob Oller
Directed by Jacqueline Castel in her feature debut, My Animal’s moody dreams are in a territorial brawl with its small-town realism, which in turn barks and snaps at its soapy plot. Its fable eventually hunts down more than a trite analogy for perceived deviance, but its blend of visual and narrative tones favors the laconic over the lycanthropic.
RogerEbert.com by Simon Abrams
Eventually, the lack of werewolf-related carnage is the least concerning thing about My Animal.
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