Rose Glass’ taut and trembling “Saint Maud” transmutes a young woman’s spiritual crisis into such a refined story of body horror that genre fans might feel like they’re having a religious experience.
A stunning debut for director Rose Glass, and a final shot that will haunt you. The film opens on a horrific scene, in which a nurse (Morfydd Clark) sits stunned across from a patient’s bloody body.
Morfydd Clark and Jennifer Ehle play nurse and patient in 'Saint Maud,' a claustrophobic psychological thriller from debutante director Rose Glass. By Leslie Felperin Contributing Film Critic Although ...
“When you pray, do you get a response?” A terminally ill cancer patient named Amanda (played by Jennifer Ehle) poses this innocent-sounding but loaded question to her nurse, Maud (Morfydd Clark).
Saint Maud is available exclusively on EPIX linear channels and streaming through the EPIX NOW app. Loneliness can be a dangerous whirlpool. A slight tug of sadness pulls to an intense ache of ...
The following contains spoilers from "Saint Maud," including the ending. Horror as a genre is preoccupatied with female sexuality, and often this leads to rather tired and sexist tropes, which isn’t ...
In particular, anyone who has seen a number of other recent indie horror movies — especially those put out by the beloved indie studio A24, which is also distributing Saint Maud — will recognize its ...
Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. It’s a fine line between religious fervor and madness; perhaps there’s no line at all. It's a question that has been explored time ...