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Cult of the lamb robes
Cult of the lamb robes







Similarly to The Village, glimpses of the ‘real’ world (which here mainly comes in the form of the police) are jarring and jolt the audience out of the world we think we are in. The image is fleeting and one that Selah cannot fully grasp, a tease of a life she could be leading, if she were allowed to be the protagonist of her own story. One of the most fascinating scenes occurs while they are travelling – Selah sees a car pass by on the road and imagines herself in it – as a normal make-up-wearing, music-listening, friend-having teenager. But as the cult are forced to move, in search of a lake that The Shepherd calls ‘Eden’ and she discovers more uncomfortable truths from Sarah, Selah starts to have doubts about their leader. He pits the women against one another, so they are always competing for his ‘grace’ to fall upon them.Ĭassidy’s central performance in The Other Lamb is hugely compelling – at the start we see her beatific expression as Selah basks in The Shepherd’s glow as a favorite daughter. His totalitarianism also extends to a ban on story-telling – The Shepherd must dictate the narrative at all times.

cult of the lamb robes

His level of control extends to shoving his fingers in the women’s mouths, which is just one of the terrifying ways he physically and mentally dominates them. While the ‘sacrificial lamb’ metaphor may be a little heavy-handed, Huisman (who also played a cult member in Karyn Kusama’s great 2015 film The Invitation) uses his eyes with effectively creepy focus when The Shepherd zeroes in on his next prey. The cult gathers in a clearing in the forest for worship, which has white thread stretching from tree to tree and the women wear white while in this space – an extension of The Shepherd’s obsession with purity. The cinematography of the beautiful, but harsh and sparse landscape is one of The Other Lamb’s greatest strengths, with the vivid indigo and magenta dresses on the women like jewels dotting the frame. The Shepherd is obsessed with people being “broken things” and this is how he views Sarah, the rebellious ‘wife.’

cult of the lamb robes

Because they are living primitively and The Shepherd won’t allow them to access modern medical care, the women (including Selah’s mother) often die in childbirth. The Shepherd fathers children with the women (and it is implied that this starts when they are young) and if the baby happens to be a boy, it is ‘dealt with.’ There is also an implication that once his biological daughters reach a certain age, the cycle starts again, so incest and abuse are baked into this cult. When the girls and women, including Selah (Cassidy) menstruate, they must go to a shack a long way from the rest of the dwellings because they are “impure and unclean.” Sarah (Gough), an ostracized member of the cult, reluctantly hosts them during this time. They survive in shacks in the woods, living off the land. The cult in The Other Lamb is made up of girls and young women, known as daughters/sisters (who wear blue) and adult women, known as wives (who wear purple/red) and their leader is The Shepherd (Huisman). Isolation from civilization also helps cults indulge in their strange rituals, away from prying eyes. Rural settings, and especially forests, are a common feature of folk horror films, with woods being associated with fairytales, myths and magic. The film is a US-Belgian-Irish co-production and it was filmed in County Wicklow, Ireland, but appears to be set in the US. Its writer, Catherine Smyth-McMullen is Australian and director Szumowska is Polish.

cult of the lamb robes

The Other Lamb is deliberately vague about both where and when it is set, which is helped by the fact it has an international cast with English Cassidy, Dutch Huisman and Irish Gough playing central roles. One of the best, but unfortunately underseen horror films about a cult, is Malgorzata Szumowska’s The Other Lamb (2019) starring Raffey Cassidy, Michiel Huisman and Denise Gough.

cult of the lamb robes

The great horror director Mary Harron ( American Psycho) recently tackled the Manson girls in Charlie Says (2018). From Children of the Corn (1984) to The Village (2004) and through to A24’s Midsommar (2019) – folk horror movies featuring cults are not going anywhere and in fact, there has been a proliferation of them in the last few years. Folk horror movies and horror films featuring cults have long overlapped, mainly thanks to the lasting legacy of the hugely influential The Wicker Man (1973).









Cult of the lamb robes