The Beast Within Review: Kit Harington Gets Hairy (and Bare) in a Handsome English Werew
Documentarian Alexander J. Farrell’s narrative debut is an atmospheric if underdeveloped tale of a family’s hereditary supernatural curse.
Beauty makes more of an impression than the titular creature in “The Beast Within.” Documentarian Alexander J. Farrell’s first narrative feature is a handsomely crafted, modestly scaled affair that benefits from being shot largely around the historic Harewood Woods and Castle in West Yorkshire. Structures dating back to the 14th century lend this supernatural tale one kind of timelessness, DP Daniel Katz’s beautifully atmospheric shots of the surrounding landscape another. But the story of a small family kept in fearful isolation by a familiar horror-movie curse is underpopulated and underplotted, making for a capably handled genre exercise without the novelty or depth to achieve anything memorable.
Related Stories
VIP+Cloud Adoption Key to Media Business Exploiting AI
Adam Brody Isn't Religious, But He Plays a Hot Rabbi in 'Nobody Wants This': 'I Hope Jewish People Like It'
After a brief prologue suggesting a hereditary affliction going back centuries, a hazily defined present (it could be anytime within the last 50 years) finds our principal characters living not so differently from their ancestors, farming and tending livestock. Ten-year-old Willow (Caoillinn Springall, who played the phantom girl opposite George Clooney in “The Midnight Sky”) is a somewhat sickly, asthmatic child without siblings or playmates. Living in a rural compound at once aristocratic and decrepit, she’s protectively minded by both mother Imogen (Ashleigh Cummings) and maternal grandfather Waylon (James Cosmo).
They’re all a bit stressed when it comes to the household’s fourth member, Noah (“Game of Thrones” star Kit Harington). When present, he’s a brash, mercurial, dominating husband and father, his authority somewhat resented by the equally bullish grandpa. But he’s frequently absent — and as Willow spies one day, he sometimes comes home nude, filthy and bloodied, as if he’d gone feral. Which, in fact, he has.
Popular on Variety
It doesn’t take his skittish daughter much longer to realize that dad, self-proclaimed “king of the woods,” runs amok with each full moon. For now, his gory appetites can be quenched by the unfortunate farm animals Imogen leaves to be ravaged after she’s shackled him in a nearby ruin. But as her grandfather notes, “He’s getting worse.” Inevitably, his own kin will be threatened by the next explosion of lycanthropic mayhem.
“The Beast Within” — not to be confused with Philippe Mora’s 1982 film of the same title, a cheerfully cheesier transformation-horror opus — has been thought out with care in the design departments. They stretch from the baroque details (i.e. antler chandeliers) in Russell De Rozario’s production design to the occasional trad-folk strains in Nathan Klein and Jack Halama’s effective original score. Katz’s widescreen cinematography delivers some gorgeous “enchanted forest” imagery of dark woods blanketed in mist, right out of a Grimm fairy tale.
But while the pacing and performances are expert enough, the director and Greer Taylor Ellison’s script lacks the substance to stir much suspense, or empathy. Family dynamics feel artificial, with Willow precociously suspicious (and plagued by jump-scare nightmares) regarding her father’s nature from the start. Harington’s showy, frequently buck-naked turn might be better suited to a simpler kind of werewolf movie — like those in which Lon Chaney Jr. or Oliver Reed weren’t required to be more than two-dimensional, just scary.
“Beast” wants to be taken seriously as domestic psychological drama, however, albeit without building sufficient complexity and nuance for the job. There are hints that what’s really going on here is an indictment of patriarchal toxic masculinity. But that angle is developed too little, too late to seem more than a modish afterthought. Likewise there’s some vague import in Willow’s playing with a dollhouse and action figures (suggesting she might be manipulating larger events) that never quite comes into focus.
Farrell clearly wants to create “elevated” horror, succeeding to a degree in terms of quality acting and visual finesse. But the actual ideas that might lift this above ordinary genre fare fall short, while the vivid tension and anxious character identification needed to excel on a humbler plane never quite arrive. Within the ample annals of werewolf cinema to date, “The Beast Within” rates as a good-looking footnote, a polished diversion that in the end satisfies enough neither in revisionist nor traditional terms to stick in the mind.
Well Go US is releasing “The Beast Within” on U.S. screens July 26.
Read More About:
Jump to Comments‘The Beast Within’ Review: Kit Harington Gets Hairy (and Bare) in a Handsome English Werewolf Thriller
Reviewed online, July 20, 2024. In Fantasia Festival. MPA Rating: R. Running time: 97 MIN.
More from Variety
Nicole Kidman Unable to Accept Venice Acting Prize in Person Due to Mother’s Death: ‘My Heart Is Broken’
How YouTube and Netflix Copied Each Other’s Homework
Annapurna-Remedy Deal Is Smart Solution to Gaming’s Funding Woes
Most Popular
Luke Bryan Reacts to Beyoncé’s CMA Awards Snub: ‘If You’re Gonna Make Country Albums, Come Into Our World and Be Country With…
Donald Glover Cancels 2024 Childish Gambino Tour Dates After Hospitalization: ‘I Have Surgery Scheduled and Need Time Out to Heal’
‘Joker 2’ Ending: Was That a ‘Dark Knight’ Connection? Explaining What’s Next for Joaquin Phoenix’s Joker
‘Love Is Blind' Creator Reveals Why They Didn’t Follow Leo and Brittany After Pods, if They'll Be at Reunion (EXCLUSIVE)
Rosie O'Donnell on Becoming a 'Big Sister' to the Menendez Brothers, Believes They Could Be Released From Prison in the ‘Next 30 Days’
‘That ’90s Show’ Canceled After Two Seasons on Netflix, Kurtwood Smith Says: ‘We Will Shop the Show’
Have We Reached Ryan Murphy Overload?
Dakota Fanning Got Asked ‘Super-Inappropriate Questions’ as a Child Actor Like ‘How Could You Have Any Friends?’ and Can ‘You Avoid Being a Tabloid…
Why Critically Panned ‘Joker 2’ Could Still Be in the Awards Race for Lady Gaga and Joaquin Phoenix
Coldplay’s Chris Martin Says Playing With Michael J. Fox at Glastonbury Was ‘So Trippy’: ‘Like Being 7 and Being in Heaven…
Must Read
- Film
COVER | Sebastian Stan Tells All: Becoming Donald Trump and Starring in 2024’s Most Controversial Movie
By Andrew Wallenstein 2 weeks
- TV
Menendez Family Slams Netflix’s ‘Monsters’ as ‘Grotesque’ and ‘Riddled With Mistruths’: ‘The Character Assassination of Erik and Lyke Is Repulsive…
- TV
‘Yellowstone’ Season 5 Part 2 to Air on CBS After Paramount Network Debut
- TV
50 Cent Sets Diddy Abuse Allegations Docuseries at Netflix: ‘It’s a Complex Narrative Spanning Decades’ (EXCLUSIVE)
- Shopping
‘Deadpool & Wolverine’ Sets Digital and Blu-ray/DVD Release Dates
Sign Up for Variety Newsletters
By providing your information, you agree to our Terms of Use and our Privacy Policy.We use vendors that may also process your information to help provide our services. // This site is protected by reCAPTCHA Enterprise and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.Variety Confidential
ncG1vNJzZmiukae2psDYZ5qopV9nfXOAjp%2BgpaVfp7K3tcSwqmismJp6o7HArKtmr5mptaq6jKucr6GVrHpyfpJvZ3FoaGeFcA%3D%3D