๐‹๐Ž๐๐†๐‹๐„๐†๐’ (๐Ÿ๐ŸŽ๐Ÿ๐Ÿ’)

๐‹๐Ž๐๐†๐‹๐„๐†๐’ (๐Ÿ๐ŸŽ๐Ÿ๐Ÿ’)

FBI agent Lee Harker is a gifted new recruit assigned to the unsolved case of an elusive serial killer. As the case takes complex turns, unearthing evidence of connections to occult practices, Harker discovers a personal connection to the merciless killer and must race against time to stop him before he strikes again.

In pursuit of a serial killer, an FBI agent uncovers a series of occult clues that she must solve to end his terrifying killing spree.

Perhaps it comes down to an individualโ€™s own phobias, but I canโ€™t say I experienced the profound sense of evil thatย Longlegsโ€™s marketing campaign โ€“ and its most enthusiastic advocates โ€“ promised. I was told it would be likeย The Silence of the Lambs, or perhaps David Fincherโ€™sย Zodiacย if it had been dragged direct out of Satanโ€™s anus, with a performance by Nicolas Cage as a serial killer so traumatising it had to be shielded from the (non-paying) publicโ€™s eyes. To be clear,ย itโ€™s a fantastic ad campaign. And clearly a successful one. The film has accumulated the kind of buzz last afforded toย Ari Asterโ€™sย Hereditaryย or David Robert Mitchellโ€™sย It Follows.

But all this noise will, for a chunk of its audience, set up the wrong expectations. For my (perhaps already cursed) sensibilities,ย Longlegsย isnโ€™t some unshakeable artefact of malevolence, and more like a knife in the back โ€“ nasty, precise, and unexpected. From its first frame to its last, it shifts from a morbid chill to a freaky little satanic jaunt. Itโ€™s as subtle as a magic trick, and a way for writer-director Osgood Perkins (son ofย Psychoย star Anthony, a useful heritage in this context) to have his cake and eat it, too.

Longlegsย both marinates in the disquieting legacy of real-life serial murders โ€“ from Charles Mansonโ€™s accomplices toย the Zodiac Killerโ€™s ciphersย and the Weepy-Voiced Killerโ€™s frantic phone calls โ€“ and, in its latter stages, goes big and arch in a way that wouldnโ€™t feel entirely out of place in one of those Seventies horrors with a title like โ€œThe Devil is My Neighbour and Sometimes We Go Bowlingโ€.

Cageโ€™s serial killer looks creepy, but also like he could plausibly breed exotic shorthair cats. The actorโ€™s unpredictability has always best served the descent into madness, and less so characters who have comfortably made themselves at home there (thatโ€™s Willem Dafoeโ€™s turf). And his performance here is at its best when he actually drops the โ€œweirdโ€ affectations and speaks deeply and slowly, with a hellfire intensity.

He does so in an interview with FBI agent Lee Harker (It Followsโ€™s Maika Monroe), whose acute perceptiveness has been tagged as a possible psychic ability, and whose interest in the case ultimately makes her the Clarice Starling to Longlegsโ€™s Hannibal Lecter. On a slightly related note, this film is one of depressingly few horrors that can set a scene in a psychiatric hospital without cruelly and unnecessarily monsterising mental illness.

Longlegs has left coded, but signed, notes behind at a string of family annihilations. In each case, itโ€™s clear the father wielded the weapon, before turning the weapon on himself. He must have been compelled in some way, but thereโ€™s no sign of forced entry. Monroe makes for a fearsome investigator, crumpling the filmโ€™s terrors up in a tight ball and holding them in her fist. Thereโ€™s something different about her โ€“ the bolted tight lines of her mouth, the slightly unfocused gaze, and the way she gently vibrates whenever sheโ€™s forced to interact with other people. That makes her both the investigationโ€™s greatest asset and its biggest target. Monroe settles into a state of constant awareness that rubs off on her audience.

Just donโ€™t look: Maika Monroe in โ€˜Longlegsโ€™ย (Neon)

Longlegsย suggests its greatest scares, rather than reveal them. During the opening credits, there are flashes of the unfathomable โ€“ crime scene photos, I assumed, though I couldnโ€™t be sure. At one point, I swear I spotted something a lot more infernal. Whenever Lee is busy with her work, all unrolled maps and sprawled-out polaroids, Perkins carefully frames her so that sheโ€™s always left with a couple of open, blurred doorways either side. To its viewers,ย Longlegsย whispers: have fun and fill in the gaps.

Dir: Osgood Perkins. Starring: Maika Monroe, Nicolas Cage, Blair Underwood, Alicia Witt, Michelle Choi-Lee, Dakota Daulby. 15, 101 mins.

โ€˜Longlegsโ€™ is in cinemas from 12 July

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