[Film Review] Saint Maud (2019)

Mariela 2022-12-09 17:18:46

Across the pond, SAINT MAUD goes to extremes in a full possession mode, nurse Katie (Clark), converting to Catholicism after a botched attempt to save her patient (but the particulars are in omission), now calls herself Maud, she is assigned a palliative care service to the dancer/choreographer Amanda (Ehle), who is diagnosed with stage four lymphoma and wheel-chair bound. Trying to right her previous unspecified wrongs, Maud imagines hearing the Almighty's calling and burdens herself to rescue Amanda's decadent soul (a lesbian hedonist). Once she oversteps the mark, rejection, humiliation and dejection assail her in quick succession, heading towards the event horizon, an obsessive Maud consummates her devotion in the most radical ritual, but the final image right before the end is a dead giveaway of her benightedness.

Glass resoundingly assaults our sensorium with strikingly somber and disturbing imagery, Maud's ascetic, sepulchral apartment (the peculiarly rotated position) seems to exist in the purgatory itself, projectile vomiting, levitation and other surreal elements (William Blake's full-color plates are distorted and reified to addle Maud's vestige of sanity) are rendered with frugal but effective special effects, on the technical front, SAINT MAUD is a marvel to rejoice in.

But, there is always a “but”, Glass's foregrounding of Maud's fundamentalistic monomania does not add anything particularly insightful to the centuries-old thematics. She pulls punches from digging into the grounds of Maud's nerve-wracking masochism (nails in the shoes), the fount of her delusion and hallucination, and lumps them to Maud's blind faith. A recent convert, Maud doesn't seek religion with an open heart, she is desirous of something to expiate her sins (but what are her sins?), and her transmogrification from Katie to Maud is a big lacuna here (yes, it is noticeable that Maud's eyes have two different colors), ergo, Glass clearly chooses to sensationalize what is more visually compelling to exercise her expertises.

That said, Clark is utterly sensational, enriches Maud's idée fixe with painstaking application both physically and spiritually. It is totally up to Clark to humanize Maud's creepiness, misery and desperation (as the script has no sympathy but pity for her), and she makes a hellacious effort to cinch that, she is a mentally impaired patient whom no one cares. Meantime, a gracious (even under ghastly make-up with a bold head) Ehle also maxes out to humanize Amanda, even if hers is a mixed-bag of badly conceived stereotypes, she is spitefully introduced with a c-word, where is one's basic compassion towards the terminally ill? SAINT MAUD has that crassness doesn't sit well with its high-concept flourishes.

Title: Saint Maud
Year: 2019
Country: UK
Language: English, Welsh
Genre: Drama, Horror, Mystery
Director/Screenwriter: Rose Glass
Music: Adam Janota Bzowski
Cinematography: Ben Fordesman
Editing: Mark Towns
Cast:
Morfydd Clark
Jennifer Ehle
Lily Knight
Lily Frazer
Marcus Hutton
Turlough Convery
Rosie Sansom
Rating: 6.7/10

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Extended Reading

Saint Maud quotes

  • Amanda: Stay with me, I don't want to be alone...

  • Amanda: Am I indecent?

    Maud: No, you are lost.

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