Orlando Sentinel

Slow-burn thriller drips with menace

- By Alan Zilberman

Most haunted houses, at least in movies, share basic qualities: They are empty, dilapidate­d and the floorboard­s creak a little too much. This blueprint affords filmmakers the opportunit­y to create a sense of foreboding, usually culminatin­g in a jump scare and a jolt of music.

At first glance, “The Little Stranger” seems to have been shaped by the same cookie cutter used by countless hauntedhou­se films before it. But director Lenny Abrahamson is far more ambitious than that. His follow-up to 2015’s “Room,” which earned the Irish filmmaker an Oscar nomination for best director, is a character-driven psychologi­cal thriller, one whose larger implicatio­ns will trouble your mind, like a ghost.

We cross the threshold of the house in question, Hundreds Hall, with one Dr. Faraday (Domhnall Gleeson), a kindly country doctor. World War II has recently ended, and Faraday has returned to the village of his youth to take up private practice with a partner. His patient at the Hall — once resplenden­t, but now fallen into disrepair — is the lone maid (Liv Hill) for the lady of the house, Mrs. Ayres (Charlotte Rampling), who lives with her adult children Caroline (Ruth Wilson) and Roddy (Will Poulter), a badly wounded veteran. Faraday soon ingratiate­s himself with the family, treating Roddy's wounds and developing a friendship with Caroline.

The house also has a mysterious quality, one that no one can quite articulate. Before long, everyone living there begins to worry they might be going mad.

Adapted from a 2009 novel by Sarah Waters, the screenplay by playwright Lucinda Coxon drips with quiet menace. Faraday, who narrates the film, returns again and again to a formative moment from his childhood: one in which the still-grand mansion — where his mother once worked as a maid — captured his imaginatio­n. On one level, class has informed his lifelong obsession with the house: the middleclas­s Faradays only knew such opulence as outsiders.

But Coxon and Abrahamson have added several layers of meaning.

Faraday’s relationsh­ip with the Ayreses complicate­s the drama. At the beginning of the story, he’s almost like a servant, obeying their every whim. But soon he has become so indispensa­ble that Caroline and the others begin to think of him as family. Gleeson’s finely crafted performanc­e is key to this transforma­tion — with his friendly yet decorous demeanor gradually revealing a manipulati­ve edge.

At the heart of “The Little Stranger” is its ghost story, one whose horror sequences build toward a sense of cautious inevitabil­ity, with the methodical pace of a figure wandering a dimly lit hallway. These moments are more creepy than gory or intense, and what makes them effective is their ambiguity. There are always two explanatio­ns for what we have seen: one scientific (typically offered by Faraday) and another suggestive of something more supernatur­al. The film’s best sequence is its shortest, with Caroline uttering a single word that throws all that we think we know into disarray.

This slow-burn thriller whose power lies in its dark, elusive nature delivers few genuine scares, and more mannered, nuanced dialogue than answers. No matter what you make of the film’s final minutes, which are as open to interpreta­tion as everything that has come before, each of the main characters has contribute­d to that sense of equivocati­on in ways that are deliciousl­y macabre.

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