During winter 1843, a young woman named Mary (Stefanie Scott) is under investigation following the death of her grandmother. As sheās questioned about the incident, the events leading up to, and beyond, the incident are brought to light along with Maryās forbidden relationship with the family maid Eleanor (Isabelle Fuhrman).
āThe Last Thing Mary Sawā is a period thriller from writer/director Edoardo Vitaletti, set in rural New York. An exploration of the attitudes at the time, particularly towards same sex relationships, the film has a slowly unfolding story that starts at the end and works its way back to the events that took place before that time. Mary, despite being punished by her family several times and ācorrectedā, continues her illicit relationship with Eleanor despite knowing the trouble it can get them both into.
With a curious younger brother Matthew (Elijah Rayman) witnessing far too much, Mary is under the constant watch of her family including her hard-headed grandmother (Judith Roberts), who presides over everyone with an air of menace. The story doesnāt particularly offer anything new, covering ground that has been covered countless times before and moving at such a slow pace, itās hard to invest in it. We know from the beginning that Mary is blinded by something or someone, and thatās really the only element of mystery to the story.
At the midway point an intruder (Rory Culkin) arrives at the family home, causing havoc and bringing a side of nastiness into the house, but the character isnāt really established with any motive or purpose other than to shake things up. Itās a shame because Culkin is very good in the role, itās just that thereās not a whole lot of reason for him to show up.
The cast as a whole is very good. Stefanie Scott proves a good lead as the titular Mary while Isabelle Fuhrman gives plenty of nuance to Eleanor, a character that doesnāt get to do a great deal other than follow Mary around. Judith Roberts is suitably commanding as the family matriarch, and at times sheās definitely the scariest thing about the film.
āThe Last Thing Mary Sawā is an incredibly slow burn of a film full of characters that arenāt very pleasant. Itās the time old tale of religion versus sexuality, and for me it didnāt really have anything new to say. The film felt more drawn out than it needed to be and there was a lack of stakes. For the most part the plot goes exactly where youād expect it to and when the inevitable final scene happened, I felt surprisingly unaffected. The film is very well made but the story just isnāt strong enough to capture the audience.
Cast: Isabelle Fuhrman, Rory Culkin, Stefanie Scott, Carolyn McCormick, Judith Roberts Director: Edoardo Vitaletti Writer: Edoardo Vitaletti Certificate: 18 Duration: 89 mins Released by: Intrinsic Value Films / Arachnid Films
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