The Week

Silent Night

1hr 32mins (15)

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A rural Christmas is

not as it seems

★★★

In the early scenes of this “bizarre comedy” from debut director Camille Griffin, we seem to be firmly in “Richard Curtis territory”, said Charlotte O’Sullivan in the London Evening Standard. Keira Knightley stars as Nell, a mother of three who is about to spend Christmas in a “holly bedecked mansion” in the English countrysid­e “with her attractive, sweary and dysfunctio­nal friends”, as well as her “once-doting” husband Simon (Matthew Goode). But as the film progresses, it becomes clear that Knightley and co. are eating, drinking and being merry because they’re facing the apocalypse: a cloud of poisonous gas is sweeping across the world; and to inhale it is to die an agonising death. The only protection from pain? “A government-sponsored suicide pill.” Audiences who went in expecting “cinematic eggnogg” may demand their money back.

“A few good ideas pulsate gently at the heart of the film,” said Brian Viner in the Daily Mail, “but it unfolds like an undergradu­ate revue sketch stretched well beyond its natural life.” As the cloud approaches, the social politics of the middle-class house party become “almost unbearably shallow and contrived”, and characters are revealed to be “thinner than cheap festive wrapping paper”. They are all “slightly nauseating”, said Clarisse Loughrey in The Independen­t, but the performanc­es are quite compelling. Knightley in particular turns in fine work here: her comic talent is underused, but she gleams with “manic perkiness”. Unfortunat­ely, though, as the film slips from satire to “absolute nihilism” it starts to “collapse in on itself” – and becomes simply “grim”.

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