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Tomaz (Alec Secareanu, right) tries to answer the secret of an old house, and of Magda (Carla Juri), the woman who lives there, in the horror thriller “Amulet,” directed by Romola Garai. (Photo courtesy of Magnet Releasing.)

Tomaz (Alec Secareanu, right) tries to answer the secret of an old house, and of Magda (Carla Juri), the woman who lives there, in the horror thriller “Amulet,” directed by Romola Garai. (Photo courtesy of Magnet Releasing.)

Review: 'Amulet' is a brooding horror thriller, and a smart directing debut for actor Romola Garai

July 23, 2020 by Sean P. Means

Mixing a brooding atmosphere and a sly feminist spin on the horror genre, “Amulet” is a solid statement debut for actor-turned-filmmaker Romola Garai. 

Tomaz (Alec Secareanu) is a homeless immigrant in London, finding odd jobs in construction — when a kindly nun (Imelda Staunton) finds him work as a live-in handyman in a rundown house. Living in the house are Magda (Carla Juri), a lonely young woman who cooks and cleans, and Magda’s ill mother, living unseen in the attic.

Tomaz is urged never to venture upstairs, even when he hears what sounds like Magda being abused, verbally and physically, by her mother. The longer he lives there, the more Tomaz becomes attracted to Magda — but a guilty secret from his past, when he was a soldier at a wartime border post in some unnamed country, weighs on his conscience.

Garai (you may remember her as the adult Saoirse Ronan in “Atonement,” or as Diego Luna’s dance partner in “Dirty Dancing: Havana Nights”) has a good eye for creepy detail, and every spot of mildew or peeled paint in Magda’s house adds to a feeling of festering rot. She doesn’t traffic in cheap jump scares, preferring to build the dread gradually — that is, until some cunning twists in the final half hour that pack a gut-punch. 

“Amulet” shows that Garai knows what she’s doing behind the camera, and I’m curious to see what she does next. 

——

‘Amulet’

★★★

Available starting Friday, July 24, as a video-on-demand rental on most streaming platforms. Rated R for some strong violence, bloody images, a sexual assault, and brief language and nudity. Running time: 99 minutes.

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This review first was published on this site on January 27, 2020, when the movie premiered at the 2020 Sundance Film Festival.

July 23, 2020 /Sean P. Means
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