The Daily Telegraph

A terrifying, pulverisin­g emotional workout

- By Tim Robey

Hounds of Love is this week’s instant candidate for “one to avoid on a first date” and “skip the popcorn, maybe” rolled into one. Not since Wolf Creek – or perhaps 2011’s mesmerisin­gly horrible Snowtown – has Australia felt like a less tempting tourist destinatio­n than in this tale of husband-and-wife serial killers abducting schoolgirl­s to get their kicks.

It’s a minor relief that the film is set in the distant milieu of 1987 suburban Perth, and another one that, though it feels based on a true story – as Snowtown or Animal Kingdom were – it’s actually inspired by several.

Writer-director Ben Young, announcing himself as a name to watch, has done his homework by researchin­g a slew of cases and considerin­g the psychology of his story very astutely. He also grew up in Perth, and the film’s gliding, anthropolo­gical vision of a middleclas­s neighbourh­ood, all neatly kempt lawns and pervasive unhappines­s, feels totally specific and credible, right down to the facial hair.

A slow-motion netball game sets things off, when one teenager fatefully accepts a lift home from Evelyn White (Emma Booth) and her husband John (Stephen Curry). We never see her again. We see the aftermath, the hideous accoutreme­nts they’ve used on her, and the forest grave into which they dump her body a few days later.

From this point, we dread the Whites prowling the streets in their tan Holden station wagon, and the dread becomes focused tightly on Vicki (Ashleigh Cummings), a rebellious 16-year-old whose parents are embroiled in a testy divorce. When she sneaks out one night on her exasperate­d mother (Susie Porter, handling a small role perfectly), Young lures her with excruciati­ng tension into the couple’s clutches. Young makes a few first-timer missteps – there’s a tricksy moment too openly borrowed from The Silence of the Lambs, and a Joy Division track that’s so on-the-nose he should have thought twice before staking his whole finale on it.

He has riveting collaborat­ors in his actresses, though. Cummings, a prize-winner at Venice last year, is startlingl­y believable at burrowing into Vicki’s distress and terror – her wide-mouthed screams are the sound design’s spine-chilling coups de grâce at every turn – but also thinking quickly through each phase of her ordeal.

And Booth is simply outstandin­g, weighing up with deep shading the oppressive circumstan­ces that have made Evelyn both torturer and captive, nemesis and potential lifeline. Inching towards something like empathy, the pair of them elevate Young’s film into a pulverisin­g emotional workout – so much more than the coldly procedural, torturepor­n exercise it could have been.

 ??  ?? Caught in the clutches: Ashleigh Cummings as Vicki in Hounds of Love
Caught in the clutches: Ashleigh Cummings as Vicki in Hounds of Love

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