Studio: A24
Director: Scott Beck, Bryan Woods
Writer: Scott Beck, Bryan Woods
Producer: Jeanette Volturno, Scott Beck, Bryan Woods, Julia Glausi, Stacey Sher
Stars: Hugh Grant, Sophie Thatcher, Chloe East, Topher Grace
Review Score:
Summary:
A mysterious man engages in disturbing mind games with two young Mormon missionaries trapped in his remote house.
Review:
Believe it or not, and the irony of opening on that phrase isn’t lost on me in light of the film’s themes, “Heretic” oddly has a couple of things in common with “Pulp Fiction” from a structural standpoint. Built as an escalating tug-of-war on a psychological battleground, “Heretic” features nearly nonstop verbal discourse. Like Vincent and Jules contemplating fast food from France, a hearty bite of the dialogue, particularly early on, takes a tone that gets its organic sound from pop culture references woven into its conversational construction.
On assignment to convert people to the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, our first encounter with Sister Barnes and Sister Paxton occurs when the two young missionaries talk about condom sizes while taking a break from biking. For Mormon women, it’s a topic as unexpected as hardcore pornography, yet Paxton somehow finds a way to dovetail having sex on camera for money as confirmation of God’s existence. You have to hear it to believe it.
Sister Barnes is more self-assured than the comparatively naïve Sister Paxton. Between Sophie Thatcher as Barnes and Chloe East as Paxton, East gives a less natural-feeling performance. Paxton is meant to be overeager and cheerily chipper, but in making her that way, there’s a rehearsed cadence in East’s characterization that reads as an actor acting. East and Paxton both work their way out of that hole by the time the character reaches the other side of her arc later down the line. Until then, Thatcher balances out the duo with reactionary expressions and responses that make Barnes the more believable and sensible person of the pair.
Both women step up their games once they’re matched with Hugh Grant as Mr. Reed, a seemingly congenial man who invites Sisters Barnes and Paxton into his remote home because he previously asked their church to tell him more about the Mormon faith. As the trio’s odd evening together moves forward from talking about board games, plagiarized music, holy texts, but not Taco Bell, the missionaries realize they’ve unwittingly entered a weird web of ulterior motives designed around challenging what they think they know about theology. They’ve no idea what Reed ultimately has in store, but based on the mind games he plays to guide them there, they know enough to be fearful of the final outcome.
Once you see Hugh Grant as Mr. Reed, you’ll be unable to imagine anyone else playing his part. James McAvoy created a somewhat similar dual persona in “Speak No Evil” except even that character still had menacing aggression visibly bubbling beneath an affable exterior. Perfectly cast for Reed, Grant is charming and chilling in equal measure, and he concurrently conveys masterful intelligence and unsettling sociopathy throughout a brilliant balancing act specifically suited to his distinct screen presence and ability range. With Grant in the role, you’re always aware Reed has something smarter, more sinister up his sleeve for the two young women than simply locking them up for Jigsaw-style torture. It’s equally easy to see how Barnes and Paxton might be manipulated by his disarming charisma even when their Spidey senses start tingling.
Midway through the movie, an element gets introduced that turns “Heretic” from a tense, three-person chamber play into something more, almost something else entirely. Further details risk spoilers, and “Heretic’s” exercise in disturbing drama is best explored in the dark. Dialogue-powered, pressure-cooker thrillers that lock a handful of people inside a single location are prone to unsustainable stories losing the suspense’s steam, or at least riding a roller coaster of inconsistent momentum. “Heretic” is an uncommon outlier where the lows are as riveting as the highs, and the entire experience is never not visually engrossing as well as mentally engaging.
“Heretic’s” effectiveness starts with a screenplay where each word, and there are a lot of them, has been carefully measured to fit a particular purpose. Gripping performances power the undulating electricity. Those components then simmer at a steadily rising temperature. Before you know it, viewers gradually transform into frogs alongside Sisters Barnes and Paxton, slowly boiled alive without consciously realizing the dangerous heat thoroughly enveloping everyone until it’s too late, and you’ve already been cooked by the film’s creepy cleverness.
Review Score: 85
Before you know it, viewers gradually transform into frogs slowly boiled alive without realizing the dangerous heat enveloping them until it’s too late.