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The Other Lamb French Subtitle

The Other Lamb
3.2 out of 5 stars - 502 votes

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  1. Creator: sapphic b
  2. Info: abolo |⚢| there's no room for demons when you're self-possesed.

Horror
tomatometer=5,9 / 10
Star=Denise Gough
runtime=1 H, 37 minutes
Countries=Ireland, USA
517 vote
Guys, try visiting this site to watch the film above or other recent films. The Other lambersart. The other lamb film. The Other lamb of god. Girl swallowed a thumb tack. Audience: Surprised pica-chu face. The Other lamb. The Ot&her La"mb Look at the website…. If people STOP comparing this movie to midsommar just cause its a cult movie maybe youll actually enjoy it 🤷🏼‍♀️ smh.

The other lamb. The Other Lamb Theatrical release poster Directed by Małgorzata Szumowska Produced by Aoife O'Sullivan Tristan Lynch Marie Gade Denessen David Lancaster Stephanie Wilcox Written by C. S. McMullen Starring Raffey Cassidy Michiel Huisman Denise Gough Music by Rafaël Leloup Pawl Mykietyn Cinematography Michał Englert Edited by Jaroslaw Kaminski Production companies Rumble Films Subotica Entertainment Zentropa Rooks Nest Entertainment Distributed by IFC Midnight Release date 6 September 2019 ( TIFF) 3 April 2020 (United States) Running time 97 minutes Country United States [1] Ireland [1] Belgium [1] Language English The Other Lamb is a 2019 horror film directed by Małgorzata Szumowska and written by C. McMullen. It stars Raffey Cassidy, Michiel Huisman, and Denise Gough. The film had its world premiere at the Toronto International Film Festival on 6 September 2019. It is scheduled to be released in the United States on 3 April 2020 by IFC Midnight and in the United Kingdom on 3 July 2020 by Mubi. Contents 1 Cast 2 Production 3 Release 4 Reception 5 References 6 External links Cast [ edit] Raffey Cassidy as Selah Michiel Huisman as Shepherd Denise Gough as Sarah Kelly Campbell as Hannah Eve Connolly as Adriel Isabelle Connolly as Eloise Production [ edit] In February 2019, it was announced Raffey Cassidy, Michiel Huisman and Denise Gough had joined the cast of the film, with Małgorzata Szumowska directing from a screenplay by C. Principal photography began that same month. [2] Release [ edit] The film had its world premiere at the Toronto International Film Festival on 6 September 2019. [1] [3] Shortly after, IFC Midnight and Mubi acquired US and UK distribution rights to the film, respectively. [4] [5] It is scheduled to be released in the United States on 3 April 2020 and in the United Kingdom on 3 July 2020. [6] [7] Reception [ edit] The Other Lamb holds a 75% approval rating on review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes, based on 20 reviews, with a weighted average of 7. 44/10. [8] References [ edit] ^ a b c d "The Other Lamb". Toronto International Film Festival. Retrieved 4 March 2020. ^ Mitchell, Wendy (7 February 2019). "TrustNordisk boards Małgorzata Szumowska's 'The Other Lamb' (exclusive)". Screen International. Retrieved 10 October 2019. ^ Lang, Brent (23 July 2019). "Toronto Film Festival: 'Joker, ' 'Ford v Ferrari, ' 'Hustlers' Among Big Premieres". Variety. Retrieved 10 October 2019. ^ Wiseman, Andreas (10 October 2019). "IFC Picks Up North American Rights To TIFF Horror 'The Other Lamb' With Raffey Cassidy, Michiel Huisman & Denise Gough". Deadline Hollywood. Retrieved 10 October 2019. ^ Mitchell, Wendy (13 November 2019). "MUBI buys UK rights for 'The Other Lamb' (exclusive)". Retrieved 24 February 2020. ^ Miska, Brad (27 January 2020). "IFC Midnight Sacrifices 'The Other Lamb' This April". Bloody Disgusting. Retrieved 2 March 2020. ^ "The Other Lamb". Launching Films. Retrieved 24 February 2020. ^ "The Other Lamb (2020)". Rotten Tomatoes. Retrieved 14 March 2020. External links [ edit] The Other Lamb on IMDb The Other Lamb at Rotten Tomatoes.

The other lamb toronto. The other lamb interview. The Other Lamb Eng sub THE OTHER LAMB Here I recommend Movie"Online"The"Other"Lamb watch- The Other Lamb online online free Here. Download The Other Lamb MOJOboxoffice. Malgorzata Szumowska’s “The Other Lamb” opens with a number of tell-tale signs that something is not quite right. While women and girls in prairie dresses and uniformly braided hair attend to daily chores around a remote camp in a picturesque forest, they are all singing the same hymn under the watchful painted image of their cult leader. At dinner, they quietly sit at a long table headed by a Charles Manson-like messianic figure referred to as the Shepherd ( Michiel Huisman). He calls the women and girls his wives and daughters, and they dress according to their household standing. The wives are clad in red with some in purple-burgundy coats or fuschia accessories; the daughters wear teal blue dresses with green sweaters and coats. The Shepherd wears black. Naturally, he refers to his all-women cult as his flock. As C. S. McMullen’s story plunges into the depths of abuse and subjugation, Szumowska explores the tensions within this communal hierarchy. The wives have a higher standing than the daughters, but that doesn’t mean the daughters don’t get jealous of new wives, some of whom are roughly the same age. Jealously carries over to the wives who look on as the Shephard’s attention moves on to younger and younger partners. Pregnancy is a badge of honor, but only if the right gender is born. It’s a harrowing dynamic made even more complicated through the eyes of Selah ( Raffey Cassidy), whose fierce loyalty and desire to please the Shephard begins to crack under the realization of the abuse he’s put her and her family through. “His attention is like the sun, ” one of the outcast wives tells Selah. “Glorious at first but then it just—burns. ” Through the grim lens of cinematographer Michal Englert, Selah’s journey leans into the teal blue, emerald and forest green tones of the daughters’ outfits and the settings, aligning the viewer with Selah’s perspective. Jenny Nolan’s detailed, homespun costumes create a visual contrast between the two groups, pitting mothers against daughters for their patriarch’s adoration. Nightmarish sequences sprinkled throughout the film add a disorienting sensation. At times, these moments can be difficult to figure out if they are Selah’s visions, nightmares or memories which involve dead animals or the sight of Selah in normal clothes in the backseat of a car, none of which she’s ever experienced in her life in this cult. There are eerie elements to the camp that are never fully explained, like intricate web-like threads that adorn certain parts of their camp, and it feels like there are still pieces of the story hidden from the audience. As Selah, Cassidy does an immense job portraying a girl learning the ugly truth of her world. She’s torn by the desire for her Shephard, the guilt of having failed him before and a sense of reluctance from a feeling that what he was doing was wrong. Her dissent begins because she fears her period since the group alienates those menstruating to atone for Eve’s sin and sees them as “unclean” until they are done. The movie ties some of her visions of rotting animals to her visceral shame around menses. Cassidy holds in all of these fears within her characters’ nervous looks while trying to remain calm as Huisman’s charismatic but controlling leader eyes Selah like his next meal—a wolf in shepherd’s clothing. As wonderful as “The Other Lamb” appears on screen and its cast embodies the story’s tension, it feels as if there is missing something from the final picture. The movie is slight in its exploration of dark subjects like cults, inter-generational dynamics and abuse, without coming to any kind of conclusion or closure. After following Selah through this self-discovery, the ending feels rushed and not as satisfying as the majority of the movie before it. Still, most of the movie keeps up the narrative suspense against a gorgeous but bleak minimalistic backdrop of rainy, windswept mountains once the group is uprooted from their camp—making Selah’s journey both physical and psychological. That’s enough to make me anticipate Szumowska’s next adventure. Available on VOD tomorrow, 4/3. Monica Castillo Monica Castillo is a freelance writer and University of Southern California Annenberg graduate film critic fellow. Although she originally went to Boston University for biochemistry and molecular biology before landing in the sociology department, she went on to review films for The Boston Phoenix, WBUR, Dig Boston, The Boston Globe, and co-hosted the podcast “Cinema Fix. ” The Other Lamb (2020) 97 minutes 1 day ago 2 days 3 days ago.

Misery sprinkled with a bit of Hard Candy. What a fantastic trailer. Reminded me of 13 Cloverfield Lane but this looks more twisted. Gonna watch this after the lockdown. The Other lambesc. The other lamb 2019 free. The other lamb movie. Look good eresting. They all need like more heavy rock music in the action movie trailers and movies tho. It missing. Ten times better if I just have it on repeat and listen to Metallica and Delta Parole as background music. Banger.

Why did i think this was a movie about violet from charlie and the chocolate factory 💀. The other lamb film scenes. The other lamb 2019 movie. Polish filmmaker Malgorzata Szumowska, together with writer C.S. McMuller, presents a visually stunning, excellently performed, unsubtle and ideologically rich look at the cult/messiah phenomena, gendered power, narcissism and emotional imprisonment. It's a smart slow-burner with a touch too slight on some of the presented themes & threatens to be style>substance throughout, but it's a journey worth taking.
"The Other Lamb" is a revenge/female empowerment fable, a story about a Shepherd and his flock, or, in other words, a self-proclaimed narcissistic Messiah (played by Michiel Huisman) who's been devoting his life to creating a cult where he can be the only man, with multiple wives and daughters. The movie puts us in the mind of Selah (portrayed compellingly by Raffey Cassidy) as we go through her journey from being an utter devotee to the cult's 'cause' to the inevitable table-turn and revenge. Szumowska's direction and Cassidy's powerful and relatable performance grants a success at putting the viewer where it wishes to. "The Other Lamb" as compared to other movies about cults, doesn't explore the evil, abuse or psychology behind it all on a satisfactory level, meaning we don't get any real closure. However, it redeems some of the flaws with being visually captivating, the cinematography's patient, environments are scarily beautiful, coloring is eye-pleasing, and it's all presented in a somewhat rare, full 1920*1080 aspect ratio. Without a doubt, a lot in "The Other Lamb" relies on atmosphere of isolation, both physical and mental, and this shot the director does not miss. Despite the subjective substance flaws, at the end of it all "The Other Lamb" still has a strong perspective on actual issues, showed through a prism of cult politics and gender inequality.
It's no "Midsommar" or "The Wicker Man" holds back in the department of violence and shock, but, as far as horror movies go, The Other Lamb" is a fairly great addition to the slow-burn, atmospheric, visually beautiful shelf of horror movies. Also, even though set in this century, it very much feels like a folk horror. My rating: 7/10.

As the title says: Don't bother" because this is a complete load of tosh. The Other. The other lamb movie rumble. Midsomar wanna be. The Other lamborghini. The other lamb cast. I thought that was Jennifer Lawrence the whole way through watching that 🤭. That website is my subscription to watch the latest film releases. there is also a large selection of films, complete with clean picture quality. I have also watched the film above, this film is very cool. uncensored.

The sounds and picture gave me so much anxiety just from the trailer. Anyone remember her as the Britney-ish popstar from Music and Lyrics. A t the outset of The Other Lamb, a disquieting little drama landing online this week, we’re dropped into familiar yet fertile territory. A charismatic and handsome male leader has assembled a group of subservient female followers living together in the wild, hanging on his every word. Like most cults, it’s one based on a rigid and regressive set of gender norms. He speaks, they listen. He demands, they comply. He takes, they give. The many fascinating questions such a dynamic raises – the hows and whys, logistically and psychologically – have given cults an ongoing prominence on screen, from The Wicker Man all the way through to Wild Wild Country. How does a collective belief in something so outwardly unhinged sustain itself, and how long can that realistically last? In the English-language debut from the acclaimed Polish film-maker Małgorzata Szumowska, we join a group already steeped in its own traditions, dictated by the Shepherd (Michiel Huisman). There are wives and sisters, all of whom are guided by his word, his control of their narrative so suffocating that even stories not told by him are forbidden. As one of the sisters, Selah (Raffey Cassidy), comes of age, the love and respect she’d always held for her leader starts to show cracks. The atmosphere he’s created doesn’t allow for independent thought or for women to possess any agency, but the more she starts to learn about the Shepherd and what happens when he deigns to give a chosen follower his “grace”, the more her entire belief system starts to unravel. Gliding close to genre tropes but moving more comfortably as an uneasy drama about the alarming power of blind faith, The Other Lamb is an intriguing mood piece, strikingly made and well-performed if not quite as powerful as it could have been. It’s a slow burn, flickering quietly as it shows us Selah’s gradual, horrifying realisation of what she’s a part of and Catherine S McMullen’s spare script does a nifty job of likening a certain form of religious fervour to being in an abusive relationship. There are dream sequences that err further toward horror territory but it’s ultimately a tale of sadness, of women duped by a monster, one who fooled them into thinking he knew something they didn’t. In one of the more poignant moments, Selah asks one of his wives, now deemed “broken” and forced to live close to yet separate from the group, why she’s stayed for so long. “Because … I’m afraid, ” she replies. “I’ve been here for so long, I don’t know who I am any more. ” The women are judged by their age, submissiveness and desirability and as we learn more about the Shepherd’s sexual proclivities, we learn that his calmness hides something more sadistic. His control over the women is absolute and Selah’s journey toward understanding the truth requires her to learn the importance of her own independence. Without forcing the point, the film sews the thread between the cult we see and between the gender dynamic in many relationships even now, of men who treat women like property and of women who confuse this for love. But it’s a slight movie and the central relationship between Selah and the Shepherd is thinly etched, which makes their final confrontation that much less impactful. The ending itself is too abrupt and falls back on the film’s less successful lurches into horror. With sparse dialogue, Cassidy, who impressed in The Killing of a Sacred Deer before getting lost in the mess of Vox Lux, and Huisman, who played a similarly nefarious figure in The Invitation, are both required to base the majority of their performances on the unsaid. Like the film surrounding them, they’re aesthetically magnetic if a little underpowered. Szumowska is a visually confident director capable of constructing some magnificent imagery, but it’s a film that’s forever threatening to be more style than substance. By the end, there’s just about enough to stop that from becoming the case but for it to haunt further than the end credits, it really needed more. The Other Lamb is released to stream in the US on 3 April and in the UK later this year.

The Other lamborghini gallardo. The Other lamb love. Wow. This trailer actually built some serious tension. When she put that marble in her mouth it reminded me of the key and Peele skit. Sadly, there are people like her character in the world that has this wanting to swallow things. This sickness is called Pica. The other lamb spoiler. The Other lambert. Shes so beautiful😍. The other lamb 2019. The other lamb trailer. The Other lamballe. This trailer had me on edge. The Other lambda. The other lamb imdb. Lol I thought this was a coronavirus joke.

The Other Lamb is a 2019 horror film directed by Małgorzata Szumowska. Starring Raffey Cassidy, Michiel Huisman, Denise Gough, Kelly Campbell, Eve Connolly, Isabelle Connolly, Ailbhe Cowley, Irene Kelleher, Charlotte Moore, Jane Herbert and others. Watch the official trailer for The Other Lamb IFC Films on Thursday, March 05, 2020 released the trailer: The Other Lamb - Official Trailer I HD I IFC Midnight. What is The Other Lamb about? Life with Shepherd ( Michiel Huisman) is the only life Selah ( Raffey Cassidy) has ever known. Their self-sufficient community possesses no modern technology, and is hidden away in the woods, far from modern civilization. Shepherd is the group's guardian, teacher, and lover. Each of the many female members of the group is either his wife or daughter. Selah is pure in faith, but also dangerously headstrong. She was raised as a daughter of Shepherd, but it is only a matter of time before she also stands to become a wife. As an encounter with the authorities forces the women and Shepherd to build a new Eden further inland, Selah increasingly doubts her faith, and has strange, bloody visions. The onset of puberty brings with it harsh new rituals, and her first shocking glimpse of what happens to Shepherd's women as they age. Who's in the The Other Lamb cast? Here is the full cast and characters of The Other Lamb. Raffey Cassidy Selah Michiel Huisman Shepherd Denise Gough Sarah Kelly Campbell Hannah Eve Connolly Adriel Isabelle Connolly Eloise Ailbhe Cowley Tamar Irene Kelleher Joanna Charlotte Moore Multiple Jane Herbert Evelyn Mallory Adams Esther Zara Devlin Tabatha David Fawaz Young Policeman (as David Khalid Fawaz) Juliette Crosbie Sister Eva Mullen Lily When is The Other Lamb released in cinemas? The film The Other Lamb was scheduled to be released on September 6, 2019 (TIFF) and on April 3, 2020 (United States) by IFC Midnight, IFC Films and Mubi. What are The Other Lamb film specifications? The duration of the film is 97 minutes. The Other Lamb filming. Principal photography began that same month. What are critics and audiences saying about The Other Lamb? The Other Lamb got high rating from critics. Other sites about The Other Lamb More information about The Other Lamb you can get at: IMDB: The Other Lamb Wikipedia: The Other Lamb Hashtags: #TheOtherLamb, #TheOtherLambMovie, #OtherLamb, #OtherLambMovie, #MałgorzataSzumowska, #RaffeyCassidy, #MichielHuisman, #DeniseGough, #KellyCampbell, #EveConnolly, #IsabelleConnolly, #AilbheCowley, #IreneKelleher, #CharlotteMoore, #JaneHerbert, #MalloryAdams, #ZaraDevlin, #DavidFawaz, #JulietteCrosbie, #EvaMullen.

Beyond the synopsis there really isn't anything else to this movie. What you read is what you get, that's the entire plot, there's no real spoilers or even anything to spoil at all. This is a movie that is a good 80% exposition without dialogue or plot development, you're just watching them move around or stare off into space. It also bounces around a little bit at times just to keep you guessing if something is actually happening or it doesn't really matter because nothing is ever actually explained because there's no narrative or plot.
It's not a good movie, the acting is hard to judge because you don't really know what they're aiming for, and honestly it just doesn't make much sense overall since nothing is explained. The cinematography is fantastic, the cast looks great, but there's no real acting or story to see here. I just felt it seemed very pointless by the end.

Most people are saying she looks like Jennifer Lawrence. I thought she was Michelle Williams! This looks really interesting! I wish I could watch it! But the larger the items got. I started to gag. This is a form of mental illness rarely addressed in movies. As a psychologist, I cant wait to see this. Another cult movie. I can't wait to see the Binging With Babish episode for this one.

HEY, FORGET THE MARBLES BOYYYY - 1:13 - Key And Peele

 

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