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This dramatic movie takes after a young lady called Moll. Moll used to live with her family on a little island. When she meets Pascal, her life starts to change better. She cherishes him and he trades her the sentiments. At the point when Pascal is charged in numerous homicides, Moll gets herself alone and apprehensive, it's the first run through to feel like that.
Not since Sissy Spacek fell in with Martin Sheen in Badlands has an actress taken us through the process of swapping home and hearth for a homicidal maniac with the manic intensity Buckley displays here.
This tale of beasts and beauty claws through appearances, expectations, and the fine line between inviting and troubling - and victim and attacker - on a plethora of levels.
There is nothing more enjoyable than a film that shatters your expectations, turning a confident hunch about what's coming next into smithereens of doubt. The British thriller "Beast" does it strikingly well.
Immaculately composed yet skittish, edgy and surprising, this impressive debut by writer-director Michael Pearce emanates a chill that will have you hugging your sides.