Writer/ Director Matthew Holness knows exactly which strings to pull in chilling puppet horror Possum

Nerve-shreddingly tense, atmospheric and exquisitely crafted, “Possum” is an artisanal horror movie, the craft of both cast and crew shining through in every detail.

When a disgraced children’s puppeteer is forced to return to his childhood home, he must confront his wicked stepfather and the secrets which have haunted his entire life, personified by his malevolent spider-legged puppet ‘Possum’.

Writer/ Director Matthew Holness (“Garth Marenghi’s Darkplace”), making his feature debut, has crafted a superbly disturbing psychological drama, steeped in the aesthetic of 1970s public information films with a dash of German expressionism and a strikingly discordant atmosphere of paranoia and confusion. Weaving in snippets of some past trauma, possible survival guilt, mental illness and potentially abuse, Holness keeps his characters and their motivations ambiguous and opaque, drawing us into the fractured mindscape of Philip (Sean Harris) and trapping us there in its oppressive confusion and desperation. Meanwhile, background details clue us into a recent child abduction and with each passing minute, we become less and less sure of the nature of Philip and his stepfather Maurice (Alun Armstrong), what they know and what they have done.

possum review

Elements of “Possum”, especially in Philip’s increasingly tenuous grip on reality, bring to mind a kind of Babadook Fight Club (although any similarities with Jennifer Kent’s breakthrough horror are purely coincidental as “Possum” was written before “The Babadook” was made) and the puppet itself, often only glimpsed is pure, uncut nightmare fuel.

At the beating black heart of the film is a pair of astonishing performances from the two lead actors. Alun Armstrong is grimy and grotesque, a warped parody of what a parental figure should be as he lurks in the decrepit home like a malignant tumour, psychologically manipulating Philip in a chilling thematic echo of the theme of puppetry throughout the film. Sean Harris, though, is astounding. A ferociously committed performance, Harris delves deep into the troubled mind of the character, imbuing him with decades of hurt and psychological scar tissue and infusing his movements with an awkward jerkiness that lends Philip a physicality that suggests he himself is merely a puppet in the cruel world he finds himself in.

The intense psychological drama plays out against the bleak, windswept vistas of Norfolk and the viscerally authentic setting of Philip’s childhood home, dank, decaying and corrupted by the lingering spirits which seemingly infest its walls. The house interior, by Production designer Charlotte Pearson, is genuinely one of the most important characters in the film, possibly even more so than Possum him/ herself and the whole production is enclosed by an incredible score from The Radiophonic Workshop.

“Possum” is a remarkably complex, confident and intense piece of cinema. It’s a world away from the slick, jump-scare shock tactics that make up the majority of horror offerings, but if your tastes run to the intense, disturbing and darkly plausible, this one might just pull your strings.

possum review
Score 7/10
logo

Related posts

Star Trek: Lower Decks S1E01 – Second Contact Review

Star Trek: Lower Decks S1E01 - Second Contact Review

While it’s animated realisation might take some getting used to, there’s a lot to like about “Second Contact”, the pilot episode for “Star Trek: Lower Decks”, the latest and quirkiest member of the “Star Trek” fleet. Taking its name – and indeed its era – from “Star Trek The Next...

Avengers Assemble (2012) Review

Avengers Assemble (2012) Review

Avengers Assemble is a triumph When Loki appears in a SHIELD facility and steals the Tesseract, Nick Fury decides its time to Assemble the Avengers. But bringing together a group of heroes is quite different from creating a team and with an alien invasion imminent, Iron Man...

Moana (2016) Review

Moana (2016) Review

Moana offers tropical tidings of comfort and joy for the holidays Disney’s new golden age shows no signs of slowing down as they cap an amazing animated year with the breezy, tropical feel good musical “Moana”. Drawing on Polynesian mythology, “Moana” tells the story of a young...

Marvel One Shots: All Hail The King (2014) Review

Marvel One Shots: All Hail The King (2014) Review

Croydon's finest gets all shook up Not content with transforming the franchise-based movie making model, Marvel have also been revolutionising the home media experience by creating a series of shorts which not only tie into the Marvel Cinematic Universe but enrich and deepen the...

Aatank (1996) Review

Aatank (1996) Review

Aatank is the Bollywood bad boy of bad shark movies When “Jaws” shattered box office records and blew minds in 1975, it inspired countless imitations but maybe none took as long to swim their way into cinema screens as India’s 1996 epic “Aatank”. Started in the early 1980s, it went...

Snowpiercer (2013) Review

Snowpiercer (2013) Review

I’m chilled by the sensational dystopian scifi thriller Snowpiercer Infamously the best film that hasn’t had a proper worldwide release yet, Bong Joon-ho’s English language debut “Snowpiercer” has been a hit in his native South Korea and France and is well worth seeking out as and...