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The Falling

  • 2014
  • Not Rated
  • 1h 42m
IMDb RATING
5.3/10
8.5K
YOUR RATING
POPULARITY
2,537
58
Maisie Williams and Florence Pugh in The Falling (2014)
Trailer for The Falling
Play trailer1:45
1 Video
64 Photos
Coming-of-AgePsychological DramaDramaMysteryThriller

It's 1969 at a strict English girls' school where charismatic Abbie and intense and troubled Lydia are best friends. After a tragedy occurs at the school, a mysterious fainting epidemic brea... Read allIt's 1969 at a strict English girls' school where charismatic Abbie and intense and troubled Lydia are best friends. After a tragedy occurs at the school, a mysterious fainting epidemic breaks out threatening the stability of all involved.It's 1969 at a strict English girls' school where charismatic Abbie and intense and troubled Lydia are best friends. After a tragedy occurs at the school, a mysterious fainting epidemic breaks out threatening the stability of all involved.

  • Director
    • Carol Morley
  • Writer
    • Carol Morley
  • Stars
    • Maxine Peake
    • Maisie Williams
    • Florence Pugh
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    5.3/10
    8.5K
    YOUR RATING
    POPULARITY
    2,537
    58
    • Director
      • Carol Morley
    • Writer
      • Carol Morley
    • Stars
      • Maxine Peake
      • Maisie Williams
      • Florence Pugh
    • 77User reviews
    • 62Critic reviews
    • 71Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 3 wins & 5 nominations total

    Videos1

    The Falling
    Trailer 1:45
    The Falling

    Photos64

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    Top cast73

    Edit
    Maxine Peake
    Maxine Peake
    • Eileen Lamont
    Maisie Williams
    Maisie Williams
    • Lydia Lamont
    Florence Pugh
    Florence Pugh
    • Abbie Mortimer
    Anna Burnett
    Anna Burnett
    • Susan
    Greta Scacchi
    Greta Scacchi
    • Miss Edith Mantel
    Hannah Rose Caton
    Hannah Rose Caton
    • Titch
    • (as Rose Caton)
    Lauren McCrostie
    Lauren McCrostie
    • Gwen
    Katie Ann Knight
    • Connie
    Evie Hooton
    • Janet
    Monica Dolan
    Monica Dolan
    • Miss Martha Alvaro
    Mathew Baynton
    Mathew Baynton
    • Mr Hopkins
    Morfydd Clark
    Morfydd Clark
    • Miss Pamela Charron
    Joe Cole
    Joe Cole
    • Kenneth Lamont
    Elizabeth Marsh
    Elizabeth Marsh
    • Miss Fanshawe
    Hannah Stokely
    • Miss Ash
    Guy Morris
    • Teacher
    Katherine Peat
    • Teacher
    Ben Kerfoot
    • Bike Boy
    • Director
      • Carol Morley
    • Writer
      • Carol Morley
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews77

    5.38.4K
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    Featured reviews

    mysticnox

    OK, so it's boring

    Maisie Williams is a good actress but the film is slow moving and almost nothing really happens other than closed minded people not wanting to talk about the realities of life.

    That being said, there is an actually problem and it's not with the film itself but rather with those that have watched it and how clueless the conclusions seem to be.

    1. The reason Lydia is acting the way she is is obvious. Because her semi lesbian relationship was in the process of disintegration when the other girl died after cheating on her. She doesn't know how to deal with it so she begins acting out. She is, after all, only a child.

    2. The fainting spells are also rather obvious. They are real for some of the girls and not for others. They have been picking at the wall in one of the rooms. Obviously there must be mold or something in the crack. It could also be lead poisoning given the time period. And then they are sticking their fingers into each others mouths or their own. It's quite obvious that some of them have ingested something that will harm them.

    3. Not all of them die, so there is another issue. Abigail was pregnant. There is a blood toxicity that can happen while pregnant. When I was little my best friends mum was confined to bed for months while she was pregnant because this almost killed her. She ended up in the hospital for almost a month. This, combined with what might be in that wall, is likely the cause of Abigails death. Given that technology wasn't nearly as sophisticated at the time this movie takes place, they may not have known what caused it.

    The movie may be boring but thinking through the answers shouldn't be so difficult.
    begoozam

    OMG - What a TOTAL let-down

    In all truth I came by this film due to the fact that I was actually a boarder at the school where this was filmed! Spent 5 years there (MANY moons ago), and ultimately the school closed, so me and a ton of other former-pupils were doing the rounds to watch the movie and see our old school!

    I then noticed that Maisie Williams and Florence Pugh were in it, so had SOME degree of expectation.

    As an ex-Director myself, I can whole-heartedly say that this was the worst directing I have ever seen. Period! The shot selection and scene setting (of which there was almost none) was frankly dreadful and in truth - amateurish.

    The story itself lacked ANY sense of position, location, scene setting, plot - I could go on...

    It is totally beyond me what the BFI were thinking when they agreed to fund this piece of simply utter rubbish.
    5TheMovieDiorama

    The Falling collapses its ambitious intrigue through overextended fainting spells.

    Puberty is a strong advocate for personable change. Experiencing the evolutionary adolescence that transforms sprouted children into blossoming young adults. Yet, the journey is rarely uncomplicated, demanding physical and mental energy that springs hormonal tendencies into action. None more demanding than the friendship between youthful girls, minor fraternities conjuring rites of passage to solidify bonds. Morley's distinctively bold mystery encompasses the pubescence of an all-girl school, experiencing synchronised mass hysteria after the tragic death of a fellow pupil.

    A psychological contagion enabling the exploration of sexuality, moulded by misty melodrama against an autumnal period backdrop. Disturbingly beguiling in nature, through metaphorical body possessions that highlight supernatural elements within the obtrusive sexual motives. Morley, for the most part, captivates when allowing her acting talent to shine through. An innocently naive Williams bravely controlling every scene in her leading role as a psychologically deterred student whom seemingly is a catalyst for the hysteria breakouts. Hospitalised, psychoanalysed and actively withdrawn from therapy, the spells of hysteria are never elaborated. An unexplainable mass psychogenic illness. Morley's intent in ambiguity enables her ostentatious narrative to visualise sexualisation. Hormonal chemicals invading the bloodstream and controlling the mind. A possession, if you will.

    Conversely, her screenplay resorts to ethereal poetry and psychedelic narration, emphasising the connectivity between these girls. Unfortunately, several conversational scenes spoon-feed proposed metaphors for the assurance of acknowledgement, most notably the one-sided therapy session that Lydia and her friends endure. Diminishing the bold interpretations that preceded the conclusive act almost indefinitely.

    Then the final ten minutes commence and Morley outwardly encounters her own spell of hysteria. The tone alters. The mood unequivocally changes. The pace quickens. She dabbles into darker subjects, a territory that heavily contrasts with the predominantly mystifying narrative. The virginal Lydia interrogating her neglectful agoraphobic mother regarding her father, whilst developing an incestuous relationship with her brother. Discovering her true roots, subsequently offering a hereditary reasoning for her mental instability. It's at this point where Morley loses that tight narrative control. Explicitly presenting a shallow explanation that manages to resolve familial turmoil in a matter of minutes, allowing the supernatural aura to dissipate. Not to mention how under-utilised and misdirected Peake was. Fortunately Pugh's illuminatingly perfect performance makes up for lost talent. The editing imaginatively strings various images together during rapid flashback scenes, which proved effective for the most part. Thorn's soundtrack however was too audacious and overpowering, likening The Falling to a casual summer school trip rather than an existential piece of art.

    Morley is a credible director, and The Falling is one feature that uniquely tackles a variety of subjects in a mesmerisingly imaginative manner. Its fundamental issues however are situated in its inappropriate climax and misplaced technicalities that allow the narrative to repetitively faint far too often.
    5peter-sweeney

    Pratfalls!

    "Picnic at Hanging Rock" a fine film of the 70s, telling a story of how a group of schoolgirls disappeared on a visit to Ayers Rock. This film had it eerie, creepy, atmospheric, less talky than this; in other words classy.

    Alas this film, which I thought would match this from the reviews I read, did not come anywhere near it. Whereas this was certainly a personal project to writer / director, to everyone else it really is a non-sensical load of tosh. Neither eerie, classy, engaging or atmospheric.

    The school group was similar to "Picnic" i.e. pretty centre of attention girl, mixed up clever girl down to fat eat a lot girl...pretty stereotypical characters.

    When the fainting/shaking actually occurs, especially in the school assembly scene I'm afraid it became comical. They were obviously well drilled on how to faint.

    The Director did try to convey a sense of nature at work here. For example, intimating that Abbie's spirit lingered among the old oak tree, straight through to hearing fox cries, owls hooting, even in the scenes shot in Lydia's house! Needless to say the (step)brother and (step)sister "getting it on" scenes were pretty uncomfortable. On that point was not convinced on the Mother character, especially the acting.

    Major plus however, Florence Pugh, she is going to go far. A great looking girl with a distinctive voice and she can sing play guitar.
    6Sergeant_Tibbs

    A clunky mystery with few noteworthy aspects.

    One of the London Film Festival's handful of world premieres, The Falling had naturally generated buzz as it's a film funded by the BFI, which is quite unusual for them. Unfortunately, while it has its merits, it doesn't quite live up to expectation as a whole. That said, the limited budget is impressively spread out with a solid cast including Game of Thrones' Maisie Williams and convincing 1960s production and costume design. The creativity of director/writer Carol Morley is less striking. It's a film interested in starting a lot of tangents without finishing them, or instead giving us underwhelming payoffs. It's built on the backbone of an odd mystery, one it's uninterested in resolving, but interested in escalating.

    Set in a 1969 girls school, when the promiscuous student Abbie, played by Florence Pugh, accidentally gets pregnant, she begins to suffer from fits of fainting seemingly at random. Her best friend Lydia, played by Williams, deals with the consequences after the epidemic spreads across the school with girls fainting out of control. The film appears to be a story about the friendship between Lydia and Abbie, but it fractures off into different directions, some more engaging than others. Most dramatically is exploration into Lydia's past, or rather, how she came into this world. Her relationship with her agoraphobic mother, played by Maxine Peake, is a key aspect of the film and one of the few things that eventually pay off in a satisfying way, if a disturbing one. It needed some more development beforehand to feel fully fleshed out, but the delivery of it in the third act is the film's greatest strength.

    While kept deliberately ambiguous, it appears that the fainting is somewhat of a punishment for early sexual behaviour (which incidentally appears to mostly be instigated by Lydia's brother, played by Joe Cole). There's no charm in its apparent disdain and shaming for the young girls' urges and it doesn't feel like a thought thoroughly argued through enough. It's most interesting for the way the authority figures react, which is in complete denial that anything is wrong, even when Lydia is on her knees in the hallway. Even so, characters don't react the way people would react to others fainting, though perhaps it's supposed to hint about how it's become so tiresome. It contributes to the uneasy atmosphere of the film with its dreamlike eeriness.

    It is quite rewarding to see Maisie Williams in this type of environment for a change. It's clear that she's making the most of it and trying her best to feel natural, but she doesn't quite have the conviction to make it work just yet. In time she'll be a great actress. It just feels as though Morley has misjudged what the film was trying to do for the most part, thematically and tonally. It does have some good aspects and interesting tidbits, existentialism that's valid if unremarkable, but as a whole it brings nothing new stylistically to the table and is often too uninspired in execution. It has a bizarre sense of humour that doesn't quite gel with its thoughtfulness and mystery. Solid production for the budget, interesting and engaging moments here and there, but The Falling is misguided from the script's initial intentions direction.

    6/10

    Read more @ The Awards Circuit (http://www.awardscircuit.com/)

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      According to Maisie Williams, director Carol Morley instructed Maxine Peake (Eileen Lamont) to not communicate with Williams (Lydia Lamont) and to keep her distance from her, in order to replicate the lack of relationship between their characters. Morley did not tell Williams about this, which left Williams feeling disliked and upset throughout the shoot due to the way Peake was ignoring her. Williams eventually found out about it during the wrap party after shooting had ended, when Peake told her about Morley's instructions and apologized for any upset caused.
    • Goofs
      (at around 21 mins) Abbie is stirring her pudding with her left hand. When the camera angle changes, the spoon is in her right hand and her left hand is up under her chin.
    • Quotes

      Lydia Lamont: I resent this idea that we're just emotional. This is real.

      Psychiatrist: It's real, it has consequences, yes. What's important here is that it's real to you.

      Lydia Lamont: Real to me, what does that mean? It's real to all of us. Something's seriously wrong. Why is everyone ignoring us?

    • Crazy credits
      Disclaimer near the end of the credits: "Although this film was inspired by a variety of real episodes of mass psychogenic illnesses, the narrative is entirely fictional."
    • Connections
      Featured in Film '72: Episode #44.3 (2015)
    • Soundtracks
      Voyage of the Moon
      Written by Donovan (as Donovan Leitch)

      Performed by Mary Hopkin

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    FAQ18

    • How long is The Falling?Powered by Alexa

    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • August 7, 2015 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United Kingdom
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Падіння
    • Filming locations
      • Carmel College, Oxfordshire, England, UK
    • Production companies
      • Cannon and Morley Productions
      • Independent Entertainment
      • BBC Film
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

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    • Budget
      • £750,000 (estimated)
    • Gross worldwide
      • $569,498
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour 42 minutes
    • Color
      • Color
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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