The Last Thing Mary Saw Review

The Last Thing Mary Saw debuted at the Fantasia International Film Festival, and will stream on Shudder in early 2022.

The Last Thing Mary Saw is not just the title of writer/director Edoardo Vitaletti’s debut feature; it’s also a horrid promise to his audience. In this grim but intriguing folk horror offering, making its world premiere at Fantasia International Film Festival, doom is certain, but the path to it is littered with dark treasures. Unfortunately, the subdued romance at its center might not be enough to keep some horror fans trudging along this twisted journey.

The Last Thing Mary Saw picks up in a brutal winter in 1843 Southold, New York. The weather is bitingly cold. The land is grey, and the God-fearing folk are merciless. So, when it’s uncovered that maiden Mary (Stefanie Scott of Insidious: Chapter 3) is in a lesbian relationship with her family’s maid (Orphan star Isabelle Fuhrman), the punishments come swift and painful. Still, their love won’t be deterred by Mary’s pious parents or even by her scowling crone of a grandmother (a terrifically terrifying Judith Roberts). Forming a shaky alliance with a wounded guard (P.J. Sosko), these besotted women plot for freedom and vengeance. However, from Mary’s introduction — hell, from the title — Vitaletti assures only pain will be their reward.

Vitaletti begins his film near the end of Mary’s journey. Bound, bleeding, and blindfolded, she is brought before a band of rifle-carrying men, who whisper fearfully that she is ruled by the devil himself. But these men will not shape her narrative. In flashbacks, the young woman unfurls what led her to this pitiable place, along the way detouring into disturbing folklore from a strange book.

Despite dealing in torture, murder, and forbidden romance, the tone is devotedly restrained. Even in moments of great betrayal and horror, the cast speaks in church whispers, their faces often a stone mask of grim judgement. Little surprise, then, that this Shudder acquisition is already drawing comparisons to Robert Eggers’ critically heralded period piece The Witch. The Last Thing Mary Saw shares its stern tone, slow pace, and preference for an off-kilter score. Percussion plays like footsteps racing down winding staircases. Wind instruments suggest the cracks of a drafty house where there is always a spying eye or eavesdropping ear eager to catch the lovers in the act viewed by the devout as an abomination. However, the muted color palette that underscored The Witch’s threat of death is traded here for warmer hues that bring lantern light alive on blushing lips, bared flesh, and blood. Yellow seeps through the film, like the stain of age creeping across the pages of an ancient book. Thus, the color palette underscores not only Mary’s passion for Eleanor, but also how her fate is determined from the moment we meet her. The ink already dried.

Through these visuals and a claustrophobic setting of a remote and inescapable house, Vitaletti creates a slow-burn tension that explodes across a clunky yet fascinating climax. Where The Witch had its sinister Black Phillip as a harbinger of doom, The Last Thing Mary Saw offers an eerie intruder (Rory Culkin), who crashes a family ritual with his dark tales, darker demands, and a dangerous glint in his eyes. After many scenes of hushed tones and hidden tenderness, his brashness and bold tongue strikes like a match to the gunpowder. While Fuhrman and Scott shoulder the plot and emotional through line of the film, Culkin runs away with it in his brief but powerful part. With a sickly smile and a steady stare, he warns that a world beyond this farm may not be any better. It’s easy to believe him. But should it be so easy to steal this film?

Period pieces about lesbians have been a bit of a trend lately, boasting such heralded titles as Carol, The Handmaiden, Portrait of a Lady on Fire, The Favourite, and even Fear Street: Part 3: 1666. Regrettably, The Last Thing Mary Saw can’t stand up to its celebrated sisters because its romance falls flat. Often in such films, the requisite period costumes make even the least bit of exposed skin feel like an illicit thrill. Yet despite the fiercely puritanical setting, the reveals here feel banal, speaking to familiarity, not lust. The sight of the lovers lounging together in a hideaway lacks longing, while their love scene — though presenting a flurry of kisses — feels oddly chaste. When these leading ladies come alive, it’s not in love, but in their fury. Fuhrman’s dark eyes flicker with unapologetic wrath. Scott’s lips curl into a vicious smile, her voice becoming almost giddy in anticipated victory. But when their attention is on each other, it just feels like, well, acting. Regrettably, this lackluster chemistry radically fails to ground the stakes of the story. So rather than frightening or exhilarating, the movie is more vaguely spooky and a bit snoozy until its thrillingly twisted conclusion.

Pokemon Legends: Arceus Introduces Yet Another Pokemon With A Messed-Up Backstory

A Pokemon game wouldn’t be complete without it sticking to elements that have made the franchise a household name for more than two decades: exploring a strange new land, battling a nefarious organization that plans to use Pokemon for world domination, and of course, discovering Pokemon that have absolutely horrifying origin stories.

Pokemon Legends: Arceus has a prime example of that last point, as the ancient Sinnoh region–known as the Hisui region in this game–features a Basculin which has succumbed to the influence of its dead comrades and evolved into a much more ferocious form called Basculegion.

“Basculin in the Hisui region can evolve into this Pokémon,” Nintendo’s official Basculegion synopsis reads. “This evolution occurs when a Basculin is possessed by the souls of other Basculin from its school that could not withstand the harsh journey upstream. Basculegion fights together with these souls, which attack opponents as if with a will of their own. This Pokémon gains power from the souls possessing it, letting it swim on and on without tiring.”

Besides having a terrific design, Basculegion’s name is likely a reference to the Gospel of Mark from Christian texts, in which a man is possessed by multiple demons and takes on the collective name of Legion. It’s also possible that Basculegion draws inspiration from salmon and their upstream migration that is fraught with peril, predators, and a high mortality rate.

For a less terrifying version of Basculegion, Pokemon Sun and Moon introduced Wishiwashi, a small Water-type Pokemon that could use its Schooling ability to call on its brethren to undergo a more powerful transformation. It’s worth noting though that Wishiwashi comes from a Pokemon generation that includes a sentient sandcastle that abducts children, as well as a giant spider that drowns its prey in the water bubble around its head.

A demonically-possessed fish is at this point normal for Pokemon games and its menagerie which includes the zombified husk known as Parasect, the sentient tree stump Phantump that’s possessed by the ghost of a dead child, and Spoink being tragically cursed to bounce for the rest of its life if it wants its heart to keep beating.

Other than introducing twisted new supernatural takes on its pocket monsters, Pokemon Legends: Arceus looks set to shake up its catch ’em all formula in several ways. To find out just how different this game is from other entries in the Game Freak series, you can check out our story on the latest Pokemon Legends: Arceus trailer, everything that we know about the game, and our Pokemon Legends: Arceus preorder guide.

GameSpot may get a commission from retail offers.

Marvel’s Eternals Unveils Vibrant New Character Posters

Marvel has released a series of character posters for Eternals, which will be out in the real world as Entertainment Weekly covers. The images pair with a cover story that offer a few new details about production for the film, which is due to hit theaters on November 5.

While a trailer was recently released, plot details are still pretty light. However, director Chloe Zhao (Nomadland) told EW that she “pushed Marvel to leave the blue screens in the studio and film on location as much as possible.” There’s one scene when the super team lands on Earth in 5,000 BC, and the cast and crew hiked to rugged cliffs in the Canary Islands, Zhao called “probably the windiest cliff that I have ever been on… you’d have to have a helicopter to achieve the wind that we had that day.” Zhao recalls being overcome with emotion, seeing the whole ensemble in an ancient-looking landscape–being both unable to stand due to her excitement, and the wind. We are not liable if the images below have the same effect on you, though you have been warned!

When Marvel’s Eternals was first announced as coming to the MCU, studio president Kevin Feige described the tone as being “full Jack Kirby,” referring to the famed comic book artist/writer’s unique and colorful cosmic art style, and described the characters as “a group of immortals who have been on earth for 35,000 years, but we haven’t met them before.”

Eternals will feature Angelina Jolie (in the role of Thena), Kumail Nanjiani, Salma Hayek (as Ajak, the Eternals’ leader), Brian Tyree Henry (as Phastos), Don Lee (as Gilgamesh), Lia McHugh (as Sprite), and Richard Madden (as Ikaris). Lauren Ridloff is also joining the cast as Makkari, who will be the MCU’s first Deaf superhero.

Dune Director Says Watching It on a TV Is Like ‘Driving a Speedboat in Your Bathtub’

Dune director Denis Villeneuve has criticized the decision to release his latest sci-fi epic on HBO Max on the same day it hits theaters, saying his movie wasn’t made for television.

Speaking to Total Film, Villeneuve doubled down on some of his previous comments about day-and-date releases. He acknowledged the “tremendous pressure” the movie industry has been put under due to the COVID-19 pandemic but stated that he was still not happy about Dune dropping simultaneously in theaters and on HBO Max.

“The way it happened, I’m still not happy,” Villeneuve said of Warner Bros. release plans, noting how the pandemic had been the enemy of cinema. “Frankly, to watch Dune on a television, the best way I can compare it is to drive a speedboat in your bathtub. For me, it’s ridiculous. It’s a movie that has been made as a tribute to the big-screen experience.”

Warner Bros. announced its industry-shaking approach to distributing movies last year, revealing that the studio’s entire 2021 film slate would be available concurrently for an exclusive window on HBO Max. Villeneuve opposed the decision at the time, saying that film is “one of the very last artistic, in-person collective experiences we share as human beings.”

Villeneuve also expressed his concerns over Dune not having the chance to perform financially in order to be viable, saying piracy would be a consequence of the dual release. The filmmaker further touched on the pressure of Dune performing at the box office while speaking to Total Film, though he displayed fresh hope for the future of the franchise.

“Everybody at Warner Bros and Legendary, they are 100 percent behind the project,” he confidently revealed. “They feel that it would need a really bad outcome at the box office to not have a Dune: Part Two, because they love the movie. They are proud of the movie, so they want the movie to move forward. And they still did half of it. So, you know, I’m very optimistic.”

Dune is the first of a planned duology adapting Frank Herbert’s seminal sci-fi novel. Villeneuve has already confirmed that Zendaya’s character would emerge as the protagonist of the adaptation’s next installment, taking the reins from Timothée Chalamet’s Paul Atreides who is the main focus of the upcoming release — which is due out on October 22.

Adele Ankers is a freelance writer for IGN. Follow her on Twitter.

A Number of Mass Shooting Recreations Have Been Found on Roblox

The community-driven game platform Roblox, which has a large audience of young children, is seemingly struggling to contain incidents of mass shooting recreations arising on its platform.

As reported by The Verge, recreations of New Zealand’s Christchurch mass shooting have been spotted on a number of occasions by Anti-Defamation League researcher Daniel Kelley. Kelley, who recently tweeted about the incidents, said that he was able to find two separate recreations of the tragedy within a “brisk 10 minute keyword search.”

Since January 2020, Kelley has reportedly found three separate instances where Roblox experiences have been created depicting the Christchurch shootings. “I would like one time to search for ‘Christchurch’ on Roblox,” Kelley tweeted after finding a recent experience, “and not find a new recreation of the 2019 mosque shooting on a game platform aimed at very young children.” he finished. Two of the experiences found by Kelley had reportedly been visited over two hundred times each on the platform.

Speaking to The Verge, Roblox said that it proactively monitors the platform for terrorist content and in particular that it is “aggressively monitoring” recreations of mass shootings. Despite this, the company also noted that references to the Christchurch shooting, in particular, are difficult to filter using automatic text references as these would likely also block legitimate and fair references to the city with the same name. Roblox says that its “proactive detection” includes human review but that seemingly didn’t stop a number of experiences that infringe upon the platform’s Community Rules from slipping through.

Roblox confirmed that it has since removed the aforementioned experiences from its platform. A company representative said, “We promptly removed this experience from Roblox after it was brought to our attention and suspended the user responsible for violating our Community Rules.” The statement went on to reiterate that Roblox does not tolerate “racism, discriminatory speech, or content related to tragic events.”

Earlier this year, Roblox went public via a direct listing which impressed investors enough to earn it a first-day valuation of $45 billion. The company’s valuation puts it ahead of many other leading companies in the industry. Whilst content depicting mass shootings and other terrorist-related ideals would potentially damage Roblox’s business valuation, Kelley said that the real harm found in these experiences comes through the ideologies that they normalize.

“Each game on Roblox is a potentially a social platform in and of itself, and can potentially give refuge to players of all ages who are flirting with or fully engaged with hateful ideologies online,” Kelley told The Verge. “Every space that allows for the veneration of hateful ideologies […] contributes to the normalization of these ideologies and their spread.”

Whilst the company continues to monitor its platform for content that infringes its Community Rules, Roblox has also recently been at the centre of a $200 million lawsuit that sees it on the receiving end of a claim that the platform has been allowing unlicensed song use by its users. The National Music Publishers’ Association CEO David Israelite announced the lawsuit against Roblox in June.

Jared Moore is a freelance writer for IGN. You can follow him on Twitter.

The Sopranos Star James Gandolfini “Scared The Living S***” Out Of Robert Patrick

Actor Robert Patrick has revealed the time that Sopranos star James Gandolfini terrified him on the set of the classic TV show. Patrick was a guest on the Talking Sopranos podcast, which is hosted by Sopranos actors Michael Imperioli and Steve Schirripa.

Terminator 2 star Patrick played the character David Scatino in three episodes of The Sopranos Season 3, back in 2000. In one scene, Tony Soprano, played by Gandolfini, has to physically assault Scatino in order to get some money he is owed. Via Insider, Patrick revealed that he had never met Gandolfini before the day they rehearsed this scene and was told by producers to “provoke” Gandolfini ahead of shooting.

As a result, Patrick told Gandolfini that he “better bring your f***ing A-game,” to the scene, to which Gandolfini replied, “Oh, I’ll bring my f***ing A-game.”

No Caption Provided

When the actors reconvened to shoot the scene, Patrick said Gandolfini was in no mood to mess around. “[Gandolfini] came in and said, ‘How’s your balls?’ I said, ‘They’re fine.’ And he said, ‘I’m hungover, let’s do this f***ing scene,'” said Patrick.

“And man, it was one take,” he said. “We kind of went through what he was going to do. He was going to grab me and he was going to throw me around, and I’m going to start crying like a little girl. And I got to tell you, he scared the living s*** out of me, man. I mean, I was so intimidated.”

Gandolfini died in 2013, six years after the Sopranos ended. His son Michael Gandolfini is set to play Tony in the prequel movie The Many Saints of Newark, which hits theaters and HBO Max on October 1. The film is set during the 1960s, and follows the young Tony as he finds himself in the middle of a violent gang war. Check out the Many Saints of Newark trailer here.