Friday, May 16, 2025

Film Review: Heretic (2024)

 

Hugh Grant's transformation is truly a spectacular sight to behold. From a bumbling but very charming Englishman, through his career, Grant grew into something that can possess so many horrible human forms. Films like The Gentlemen and Operation Fortune: Ruse de Guerre show a Grant that is sly, greedy, and selfish to the point of disgust. But in Heretic, he took his ability to inhabit unique villains to an entirely new level.

In this setup, he plays Mr. Reed, an elderly recluse who is visited by a pair of young women, acting as missionaries of the LDS Church. But, in his deceivingly humble home, Mr. Reed begins to question the church and their faith, slowly but surely putting them on a path of choices and terrible outcomes. As he does this, he remains both relatable and clearly driven, while each and every idea or question of his comes with a potentially sinister edge behind it.

The film, written and directed by Scott Beck and Bryan Woods, navigates an interesting space that is brimming with social commentary - connecting things like versions of Jesus-like god throughout history with the Landlord's game - but remains a chilling horror tale that is constantly ratcheting up. The linchpin in all of that is Grant, of course, but both Sophie Thatcher and Chloe East do a great job of initially clueless missionaries engaging themselves in his web of choices and beliefs.

While there is a sense of constant danger that Heretic will slide into the tropes of other similar pawn-in-a-maze-like films, it dodges all of them and instead blossoms into a space neither too fresh nor too stale. Besides being a really good genre film, Heretic also convinced me that I can't wait for what new monsters Grant will create in his upcoming movies.