The Ones Below

Released: 11 Mar 2016

Woman standing in front of a mirror, with shelves displaying various items behind her. She has long, wavy blonde hair and is wearing a light-coloured sweater.
Woman standing in front of a mirror, with shelves displaying various items behind her. She has long, wavy blonde hair and is wearing a light-coloured sweater.
3

Anticipation.

Not sure what to expect.

4

Enjoyment.

In thrall to Roman Polanski, and all the better for it.

4

In Retrospect.

Can’t wait to see David Farr’s next baby.

Director David Farr delivers a top-notch domestic drama starring a maternally-conflicted Clémence Poésy.

“You don’t deserve that thing inside you!” It may be said in the bitter blindness of grief, but this line from The Ones Below, addressed to pregnant Kate (Clémence Poésy) by her neighbour Teresa Baker (Laura Birn), cuts to the very heart of Kate’s anxieties about maternity.

A troubled family history and a difficult relationship with her own mother (Deborah Findlay) have meant that Kate has taken 10 years even to consider having a baby with husband Justin (Stephen Campbell Moore). With perfect timing, the similarly pregnant Teresa and her controlling, clean freak older husband Jon (David Morrissey) move into the vacant apartment downstairs. Kate immediately warms to Teresa’s devoted enthusiasm – contrasting with Kate’s own hesitancy – for bringing a baby into the world.

“It’s not that it’s ugly,” Kate comments on the Bakers’ newly, too- neatly manicured back lawn, “It’s just that it’s really determined to be a garden.” This determination extends to Jon and Theresa’s life-mission of creating their own picture-perfect nuclear family.

When a tragic accident takes that possibility away, the vacuum is filled with a toxic mix of recrimination, envy and covetousness in which their determination will transgress all neighbourly boundaries. For amid all the usual stresses and pressures of being a parent, Kate is also growing convinced that the Bakers have sinister designs on her newborn – suspicions which seem confirmed by shots, at least some objective, of Teresa’s furtive activities while babysitting.

A tale of two flats, of two pregnancies and of two colours (muted blues for the Pollards, alarming citron yellows for the Bakers), The Ones Below establishes a dramatic upstairs/downstairs clash of styles and outlooks, before moving into thrilling, claustrophobic spaces. The plot gestates tautly, before the truth, no less harrowing for being expected, comes out.

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