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Surgeons of Horror

~ Dissecting horror films

Surgeons of Horror

Tag Archives: neon

Keeper (2025) — Osgood Perkins and the Slow Bleed of Mythic Terror

20 Saturday Dec 2025

Posted by surgeons of horror in Movie review

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

film, horror, movies, neon, osgood perkins, reviews, tatiana maslany

Osgood Perkins has never been interested in horror as spectacle. His films drift, linger, and rot from the inside out, favouring mood over momentum and suggestion over shock. Keeper finds the director once again circling his most enduring fixations—the paranormal, the mythic, and the occult—and when he commits fully to these shadowy preoccupations, the results are among his most unsettling to date.

The premise is deceptively simple. Liz and Malcolm retreat to a secluded cabin for an anniversary weekend, a familiar setup that Perkins treats less as narrative engine than ritual initiation. When Malcolm abruptly returns to the city, the film fractures, leaving Liz alone in a space that begins to feel less like a holiday retreat and more like a consecrated site. What follows is not a barrage of scares but a slow accretion of dread, as the cabin reveals itself to be a vessel for something ancient, watchful, and profoundly uninterested in human morality.

Perkins’ greatest strength has always been his willingness to let horror breathe. Like The Blackcoat’s Daughter and Gretel & Hansel, Keeper operates on a frequency closer to folklore than modern genre mechanics. The evil here is not noisy or demonstrative; it is embedded, inherited, and ritualistic. The cabin feels less haunted than kept—maintained by forces that predate Liz’s arrival and will endure long after she’s gone. Perkins paints this world with a vivid but restrained brush, using sound design, negative space, and repetition to suggest a cosmology that remains tantalisingly opaque.

Tatiana Maslany anchors the film with a performance of remarkable control. Isolated for much of the runtime, she carries Keeper through micro-expressions, physical tension, and an ever-shifting relationship to her surroundings. Her Liz is neither hysterical nor heroic; she is observant, increasingly wary, and quietly devastated as the rules of reality begin to slip. Maslany understands Perkins’ rhythms, allowing fear to register not as reaction but as recognition—an awareness that something has always been wrong here.

If the film falters, it’s in its refusal to fully sharpen its final act. Perkins’ devotion to ambiguity, while thematically consistent, occasionally blunts the emotional impact. There are moments where the mythology feels more gestured at than excavated, and viewers seeking narrative closure may find the ending frustratingly elusive. Yet this, too, feels intentional. Keeper is not about defeating evil or escaping it, but about realising one’s place within a larger, indifferent order.

In the context of Perkins’ body of work, Keeper stands as a confident reaffirmation of his obsessions. When he centres his stories on the occult and the mythic, he is capable of conjuring horror that feels timeless, intimate, and deeply unclean. This is a film that seeps rather than strikes, lingers rather than lunges.

The Prognosis:

A haunting, slow-burning descent into ritual and isolation, Keeper confirms Osgood Perkins as one of modern horror’s most singular—and uncompromising—voices.

  • Saul Muerte

Movie review: Longlegs (2024)

20 Saturday Jul 2024

Posted by surgeons of horror in Movie review

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

horror, longlegs, maika monroe, neon, nicolas cage, osgood perkins, oz perkins, reviews

There are some directors in the horror genre who make their mark with bold, fantastical statements. While their voices are initially impactful, by the third or fourth outing, their energy may begin to wane. However, Osgood Perkins, the director and writer of Longlegs, is playing the long game. Known for his meticulously slow pacing, strong leanings into paranormal and occult storytelling, and rich visual imagery, Perkins has been crafting a unique style that promises a lengthy and delightfully intriguing career.

His first two features, The Blackcoat’s Daughter and I Am The Pretty Thing That Lives in the House, were meticulously detailed, focusing on themes of isolation and desperation. His third feature, Gretel & Hansel, offered an offbeat twist on the classic fairytale with a focus on the feminine side of the story. While it may have strayed slightly from his usual tone, it still showcased incredible pacing and cinematography.

Longlegs may be his finest hour yet. It blends notable elements from thriller classics like Silence of the Lambs and David Fincher’s films, combined with the Lynchian vibe that permeates Perkins’ work. From its opening scenes, Longlegs sets a gripping pace and tone with a shocking opener and remarkable sound design that hooks you and never lets go.

Maika Monroe (It Follows) delivers a powerful performance as Lee Harker, an FBI agent with an uncanny knack for instinctively tuning into her environment. This trait quickly gets her noticed and involved in a curious investigation of a serial killer who leaves cryptic notes at his crime scenes. Harker’s birdlike mannerisms and quirky social awkwardness unfold as the inquiry unearths more than she anticipated, despite her possible psychic intuition.

And then there’s Nicolas Cage’s wondrous transformation as the titular Longlegs. The cinematography teases us with glimpses of his face, luring us deeper into the mythology that surrounds him.

The Prognosis:

Visually stunning and meticulously crafted, Perkins delivers yet another slow-burn feature that ensnares you. While the middle act may wane slightly, threatening to loosen its grip on the viewer, the final act pulls the trigger and leaves you reeling. Perkins’ style may not be for everyone, but Longlegs is the closest he has come to his best directorial stance. The journey he takes us on is always gripping, and the performances are phenomenally bright. May he continue to shine with the steady hand he has demonstrated so far.

  • Saul Muerte

Longlegs is currently screening at cinemas nationwide.

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