logo
‘The Rule of Jenny Pen' Review: More Than the Usual Nursing Home Horrors

‘The Rule of Jenny Pen' Review: More Than the Usual Nursing Home Horrors

New York Times06-03-2025

The philosopher Immanuel Kant once said, 'out of the crooked timber of humanity, no straight thing was ever made.' Arguably, then, old age warps us even further. This certainly seems to be the case at the Royal Pine Mews Care Home, the fictional New Zealand setting for much of 'The Rule of Jenny Pen,' a new film from the director James Ashcroft.
Ashcroft, who adapted the film with Eli Kent from a short story by Owen Marshall, begins the tale with Geoffrey Rush as Stefan Mortenson, an imperious judge. He excoriates a young woman connected with a criminal case: 'You're not a victim here.' These words will come back to haunt him.
During his final ruling, he suffers a stroke, which lands him in Royal Pine Mews. While he's partially paralyzed, he's still mentally sharp enough to be able to correct a fellow patient who misquotes Shelley's poem 'Ozymandias.' But he's not quite prepared to handle another patient, Dave Crealy (played by a purposefully twitchy John Lithgow), who intimidates Stefan and other patients with the help of a puppet he's made out of a baby doll (from which, among other things, he's removed the eyes, to make it even more creepy) that he calls Jenny Pen.
Ashcroft's prior feature, 'Coming Home in the Dark' (2021), was a relentlessly discomforting and ultimately harrowing tale of a family vacation gone wrong. With this film he expands his palette, serving up a double dose of horror: Crealy's torture of Stefan, and Stefan's seemingly inexorable mental deterioration. The director remains near-merciless in his approach, never shying away from showing his vulnerable characters (and the tormentor played with twisted relish by Lithgow is, ultimately, as unprotected as any of the others) in states of utter abjection.
The Rule of Jenny PenRated R for themes, language, intense horror. Running time: 1 hour 43 minutes. In theaters.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

The Rule of Jenny Pen: John Lithgow and Geoffrey Rush star in 'pure choking horror'
The Rule of Jenny Pen: John Lithgow and Geoffrey Rush star in 'pure choking horror'

Yahoo

time25-03-2025

  • Yahoo

The Rule of Jenny Pen: John Lithgow and Geoffrey Rush star in 'pure choking horror'

When you buy through links on our articles, Future and its syndication partners may earn a commission. This "care-home thriller" from the New Zealand director James Ashcroft is an unusual affair, said Tim Robey in The Telegraph. Ten minutes into the film, a judge, Stefan (Geoffrey Rush), suffers a stroke mid-trial and is confined to a nursing facility, where he almost immediately sees a patient accidentally incinerate himself. It sets the tone for what follows: it turns out that patients at the home are being terrorised behind the staff's back by one of its long-term residents, a "sadistic maniac" called Dave (John Lithgow). Bearing a therapeutic hand puppet he calls "Jenny Pen", its eyes plucked out "for added menace", he creeps into his fellow patients' rooms at night and forces them "to pay obeisance to her in the most demeaning ways". It's a terrific premise – and to an extent a plausible one – but the film falls flat, owing largely to a "leaky script" that drains it of the necessary suspense. Of course, the upright Stefan and the deranged Dave clash, said Nick Howells in The London Standard. As a result, their final showdown doesn't come as much of a shock. Still, the "sadistic relish with which we get there" is worth the ticket price, as are the two star turns: Lithgow is "balls-to-the-wall bonkers" as Dave, while Rush plays the arrogant retired judge with "erudite gravitas". The film is reminiscent of the ventriloquist section in the classic 1940s horror "Dead of Night", said Peter Bradshaw in The Guardian; it also reminded me of Patrick Hamilton's depictions of toxic pettiness and bullying in grim boarding houses: the intolerable boredom of afternoons in the "featureless blankness" of the facility's association room "is shown to encourage mental decay and catatonia". The film's denouement is flawed, but "pure choking horror fills the screen like poison gas".

What Persuaded John Lithgow To Join Horror Film The Rule Of Jenny Pen? He Told Me About The One Thing That's 'Not Ordinarily How You Hear Horror Directors Talk'
What Persuaded John Lithgow To Join Horror Film The Rule Of Jenny Pen? He Told Me About The One Thing That's 'Not Ordinarily How You Hear Horror Directors Talk'

Yahoo

time20-03-2025

  • Yahoo

What Persuaded John Lithgow To Join Horror Film The Rule Of Jenny Pen? He Told Me About The One Thing That's 'Not Ordinarily How You Hear Horror Directors Talk'

When you buy through links on our articles, Future and its syndication partners may earn a commission. The horror genre has a unique place in the entertainment industry. Some of the best horror movies were made on a minimal budget, allowing there to be massive profit if a title hits big. Horror has been experiencing a renaissance for years now, attracting some A list talent to join in on the fun. Case in point: the upcoming horror movie The Rule of Jenny Pen, which stars icons Geoffrey Rush and John Lithgow. And the latter actor shared with CinemaBlend how he was inspired to sign on, specifically after hearing the vision of filmmaker James Ashcroft. I had the pleasure of speaking with Rush and Lithgow about their collaboration on The Rule of Jenny Pen, and the latter actor couldn't say enough positive things about the movie's director. I asked about the film's grueling tone, where he revealed his original reaction to the movie's script. In the 3rd Rock from the Sun (which was arguably one of the best NBC shows) alum shared: We were really having fun. You're right, it's a dark and disturbing film. It's a script that was so scary and unsettling that I wasn't even sure I was capable of doing it. Of plunging into this dark world. But the process of doing this film was exhilarating. So much of this has to do with James [Ashcroft], a man who loves the horror genre as you do, Corey. He takes it very seriously and he finds great layers, deep layers of serious intent to what he's doing. It's a film about bullying and about cruelty and revenge. Ideas that are, God knows, are very much up in the air these days. Points were made. This latest horror flick is set in a nursing home, where Lithgow's villainous Dave Crealy is terrorizing his fellow residents with the movie's titular puppet. CinemaBlend's The Rule of Jenny Pen review praised the "nasty" film, although it sounds like the cast had a great time filming the project. The setting of the movie is definitely captivating, with Geoffrey Rush equating Jenny Pen to Alien when speaking about the way the nursing home immerses viewers into the story. Despite how hard it is to watch the residents being victimized, John Lithgow explained how Ashcroft actually tried to be very "compassionate" about the story. In his words: And is a kind of meditation on trying to find out what makes cruel people tick. Where does this come from? So often it comes from damage. It comes from hurt that they themselves have experienced. That's how I approach it, how I approached this character and the whole film. And James was just this great tour guide of his intent. He's a remarkable man, he's very smart. In depth knowledge. He's got a great heart, he's passionate. And he sees this as a very compassionate story, which is not ordinarily how you hear horror directors talk about what they do. That's what persuaded me. While there are scenes in The Rule of Jenny Pen that are hard to get through, it's only because we're meant to care for the elderly residents and want the best for them. That's where the compassion part comes in, and why Dave Crealy is so easy to hate as the villain of the project. In our interview, John Lithgow also shared that director James Ashcroft's family is actually uniquely tied to the process of caring for the elderly. Namely because his wife and her family a run them. As he told me: His wife is a woman who runs senior care facilities and runs them very well. She's second generation; her mother and father create a chain of care homes. He really wanted to treat the subject with great dignity. I feel they did just that, even if the movie was grueling at points... even has a horror fan. The circle of life means that so many of us have cared for elderly relatives, allowing for an easy emotional anchor in The Rule of Jenny Pen. Add in the two legendary actors at the forefront of the story, and the project has a lot going for it. Moviegoers can judge for themselves as The Rule of Jenny Pen gets its wide theatrical release on March 7th as part of the 2025 movie release list. And it's just one of many horror titles expected to arrive this year.

The ‘Final Destination' Films, Ranked from Worst to Best
The ‘Final Destination' Films, Ranked from Worst to Best

Yahoo

time18-03-2025

  • Yahoo

The ‘Final Destination' Films, Ranked from Worst to Best

Like it or not, 2025 is rapidly becoming the Year of the Freak Accident. In horror, everybody from audiences who loved 'The Monkey' to that very flammable fellow in 'The Rule of Jenny Pen' is feeling it. But there's even more to come when 'Final Destination' — the genre's most criminally underrated supernatural franchise — returns with scads more not-so-accidental death on May 16. The aughts used to get a bad rap in pop culture, but that's improved somewhat in recent years. As filmmakers have released their death-grip obsession on the '80s, familiar faces and franchises from throughout the 2000s have reemerged across all types of movies and TV. Right now, for example, you can see the forty-something 'Veronica Mars' dating that forty-something guy from 'The O.C.' in a rom-com on Netflix that's been wildly popular — in spite of the title 'Nobody Wants This.' More from IndieWire When Nora Ephron Met Jason Voorhees and Freddy Krueger: Meet Horror's New Iconic Killer in 'Heart Eyes' The Best Horror Movies of 2024 A Guinness World Records Consultant Analyzed 27,000 Horror Movies for a New Report. Here's What He Found When it comes to nostalgia for aughts-era nightmares, specifically, 'Saw' is back and going on strong. 'The Strangers' is a multi-part melodrama… for some reason. And it might still be a way off but the long overdue 'Jennifer's Body' sequel seems practically imminent. Is it all an overdue artistic reevaluation of a bygone period suddenly realized? Or is it happening to us now…in this way…by some kind of…design? Co-directed by Zach Lipovsky and Adam Stein, 'Final Destination: Bloodlines' is among this year's most anticipated horror releases — reviving the gory death-by-Rube-Goldberg-machine format that divided critics but never failed at the box office from 2000 to 2011. 'Bloodlines' is the sixth film in the series, which kicked off with the original movie directed by James Wong and distributed by New Line. The film celebrates its silver anniversary on March 17 and is based on an 'X-Files' spec script by Jeffrey Reddick. The first 'Final Destination' crash-landed into theaters as an unconventional slasher, following a kid (Devon Sawa) who acts fast after getting a terrifying premonition while boarding a plane to Paris. He'll live to regret it… for a while anyway… as Death's Design hunts down each and every shouldn't-have-been survivor from the ill-fated Flight 180. By swapping the typical masked villain for an unseen lethal presence — lore-dumped about in the films by the late-great Tony Todd — Reddick and Wong uncovered a brilliant new method of making kills their movie's main event. The formula that emerged (mass casualty event + freak accident ^nth power = fine enough FD sequel) worked well for a decade and got an added layer of intrigue with a twist-ending that brought the events of 'Final Destination 5' full circle. From an Olympic-qualifying spine snap to a tanning bed/casket jump-cut you'll feel in your toes, the grisly freak accidents that make 'Final Destination' memorable have aged with varying degrees of success. We don't need to see another pool drain suck organs out of some asshole's butt… and yet, we're not saying 'no' to another 'Final Destination 2' logging truck incident. (It's the film that still haunts America's freeways!) Ranked worst to best, these are the five 'Final Destination' films 25 years since it all began. —Alison Foreman Best of IndieWire The 15 Best Robert Pattinson Performances, from 'Good Time' to 'High Life' The 17 Best Thrillers Streaming on Netflix in March, from 'Fair Play' to 'Emily the Criminal' All 97 Oscars Best Picture Winners, Ranked

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store