'LAST NIGHT IN SOHO', which I saw at my local independent movie theatre this week, is an MA15+ Rated British psychological horror film Directed, Co-Produced, Written and based on a story by Edgar Wright, whose previous film making credits are 'A Fistful of Fingers' - his Directorial debut in 1995, then 'Shaun of the Dead', 'Hot Fuzz', 'Scott Pilgrim vs. the World', 'The World's End', 'Baby Driver', and the doco 'The Sparks Brothers' released earlier this year. The film saw its World Premiere screening at this years Venice International Film Festival on 4th September 2021, before its release in the UK and US on 29th October. The film was originally slated for release at the end of September 2020, but was delayed to 23rd April 2021, due to the COVID-19 pandemic, before being delayed again to 22nd October, then again to the following weekend, before being released in Australia last week. So far the film has grossed US$20M off the back of a US$43M production budget and has garnered generally favourable Reviews.
Here, an aspiring fashion designer Eloise 'Ellie' Turner (Thomasin McKenzie) who has a love for everything from the Swinging Sixties relocates from her home town of Redruth in Cornwall to London to attend the London College of Fashion. Her mother was also a fashion designer, committed suicide, and whose ghost she sees from time to time in mirrors, although the apparition never speaks to her. She lives with her grandmother Margaret Turner (Rita Tushingham) in Cornwall.
Once in London and located in the halls of residence, she is paired up with snobbish roommate Jocasta (Synnove Karlsen). It is only John (Michael Ajao) another student who shows Ellie any empathy. Ultimately, after one too many rowdy parties and put downs Ellie moves out and into a bedsit owned by the elderly Ms. Collins (Diana Rigg, in her last screen acting role before her death in September 2020).
That night, Ellie has a dream whereby she is transported back to 1965 London, and in particular Soho. At the famed and popular Cafe de Paris, she observes a confident young blonde woman, Sandie (Anya Taylor-Joy), making enquiries about becoming a singer at the club, saying that she will be the next Cilla Black. Sandie embarks on a relationship with the charming manager, Jack (Matt Smith). The next morning while in class at college, Ellie begins to design a dress inspired by Sandie and discovers an unexplained love bite on her neck.
Back in the present day Ellie is disturbed by more and more menacing apparitions that resemble Jack and the men who abused Sandie. John persuades her to go to a Halloween Party, from which she later flees after the spirits attempt to accost her. John returns with her to her bedsit, where she has a vision of Jack murdering Sandie. Ellie decides to track down the silver-haired man, who she believes is Jack. She goes to the Police, and recounts her story in full detail, but she is taken for an unhinged crank.
Distraught, Ellie decides to leave London and return to her Grandmother in Cornwall. John offers to drive her there, but first he drives her back to Ms. Collins' house so she can tell her that she's leaving and collect her belongings. Ms. Collins tells her that a female detective came by earlier in the day asking about Sandie's murder before revealing that she is actually Sandie. She explains that Ellie's vision of Sandie's death was in fact a vision of Sandie killing Jack when he threatened her with a knife. She then lured the men she was pimped to back to her room and killed them, hiding the bodies under the floorboards and in the walls of the house. Ms. Collins also reveals that she drugged Ellie's tea with the intention of killing her to prevent the truth from getting out.
Edgar Wright certainly knows how to create a genre bending film that is a nod to all things that London had to offer the Swinging Sixties; to the Hammer House of Horror movies that dominated cinema from the mid-'50's til the mid '70's; to time travel; the mix of Italian and British horror thrillers of the era; to the soundtrack straight out of the '60's songbook; the great performances from an ensemble cast of young players and senior practitioners; and the surprising plot twists and turns that in the final analysis I never saw coming. Whilst this is touted as a horror film, horror it might be in the 1960's sense of the term, but it never left me feeling on the edge of my seat, or biting my nails in eager anticipation of what comes next, or offers up anything that can be truly defined as scary. Additionally, the timing of the final fashion show sequence is a bit off, with Ellie's hand still bandaged up from being slashed by Ms. Collins/Sandie indicating it is just a week or two since, while John seems to have made a complete recovery from the stab wound to his gut. That said, the stunning visuals, the stylish thrills, and the mash up of genres make for a highly entertaining couple of hours spent in a darkened room with a bunch of strangers all gawping up at a giant screen.
'Last Night in Soho' merits four claps of the Odeon Online clapperboard from a possible five claps.
-Steve, at Odeon Online-
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