The Ghoul (2016 film)
Summary
"I know its name: The Ghoul!" A homicide detective goes undercover as a patient to investigate a psychotherapist he believes is linked to a strange double murder. As his therapy sessions continue the line between fantasy and reality begins to blur.
Details
- Release Date: 2016
- Country/Language: UK, English
- Genres/Technical: Horror (psychological horror), Thriller
- Setting: Modern UK
- Runtime: 1 hr 25 min
- Starring: Tom Meeten, Alice Lowe, Rufus Jones
- Director: Gareth Tunley
- Writer: Gareth Tunley
- Producer/Production Co: Jack Healy Guttmann, Gareth Tunley, Ben Wheatley, Tom Meeten, Dhiraj Mahey;
- View Trailer: (link)
- IMDB Page: (link)
Ratings
MPAA Ratings
- Rated: not rated (maybe equivalent to a PG-13 for Violence and Profanity)
Tentacle Ratings
A rough measure of how "Lovecraftian" the work is:
- SS___ (Two Tentacles: Barely Lovecraftian; vaguely similar in tone, could be a very loose adaptation)
The vaguely Lovecraftian treatment of the titular Ghouls as undying sorcerers surviving via thought-transference, as well as themes of paranoia and distorted identity come close in theme to Lovecraft's work.
Note: This rating is not intended as a measure of quality, merely of how closely related to Lovecraftian "Weird" fiction the work is.
Reviews
Review Links:
- Anton Bitel at Projected Figures (link) -
- Joe Bendel at J.B. Spins (link) -
- Laura Clifford at Reeling Reviews (Link) (B+) -
- Aime Cranswick at Flickering Myth (link) -
- Alexa Dalby at Britflicks (link) (3/5 Stars) -
- Richard Scheib at The Science Fiction, Horror and Fantasy Film Review (link) (3/5 Stars) -
Synopsis (SPOILERS)
Spoiler Section (Highlight to Read)
A man identifying himself as a homicide detective apparently goes undercover as a patient to investigate a psychotherapist he believes is linked to a strange double murder. As his therapy sessions continue the line between fantasy and reality begins to blur, and it becomes uncertain whether the man really is a detective undercover as a mental patient, or a mental patient pretending to be a detective. When the man meets another patient suffering the delusion that his doctor's unorthodox psychological methods are actually a black magic ritual used by aging sorcerers to steal human bodies, and the man's own therapist transfers her patients to the suspected sorcerer, the entire story descends into a bizarre paranoid haze of delusion, and the viewers are left to their own devices to decide what is truth and what is fantasy.
Notes
Comments, Trivia, Dedication
- The film references the Möbius Strip and its three-dimensional equivalent, the Klein Bottle, as psychological models, philosophical constructs, or magical devices, as well as the use of Sigil Magic for wish fulfillment.
Associated Mythos Elements
- race: Witches
- race: Ghouls (referenced obliquely; the film's Ghouls are psychological/philosophical in nature, rather than carnal, consuming the intellect of their victims and stealing their bodies)
Keeper Notes