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Film review: In the Earth

This folk horror film hits the spot for Linda Marric

June 17, 2021 12:06
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1 min read

Ben Wheatley’s last film was an ill-fated Netflix adaptation of Daphne du Maurier’s classic novel Rebecca. The film was largely panned by critics, but I was impressed by its direction and flawless cinematography.

Fans of Wheatley’s earlier horror offerings will be pleased to know that the writer/director of such gems as Kill List, A Field In England and Sightseers is back once again to his more “rough around the edges” roots with the release of In The Earth, a chilling folk horror.

In the wake of an undisclosed pandemic which saw the world ravaged by a deadly virus, Martin Lowery (a solid turn by Joel Fry), is a scientist sent to a government-controlled outpost near Bristol to study its unusually fertile forested area.

Shortly after arriving, Martin is informed by local park guard Alma (Ellora Torchia) of the legend of the Parnag Fegg, a mythical woodland spirit that inhabits the area.