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Andrea Riseborough in Corinna McFarlane’s ‘Bergmanesque’ The Silent Storm.
Andrea Riseborough in Corinna McFarlane’s ‘Bergmanesque’ The Silent Storm. Photograph: Jonathan Olley
Andrea Riseborough in Corinna McFarlane’s ‘Bergmanesque’ The Silent Storm. Photograph: Jonathan Olley

The Silent Storm review – tempestuous drama on a Scottish island

This article is more than 7 years old
Damian Lewis’s puritanical minister and Andrea Riseborough’s terrorised wife must deal with an unexpected arrival

Stunning views of the Isle of Mull lend much-needed beauty to this sternly overwrought tale of puritanical minister Balor McNeil (Damian Lewis) terrorising his outsider wife Aislin (Andrea Riseborough) on an increasingly deserted Scottish island. When young offender Fionn (Ross Anderson) is dumped on his doorstep, the minister’s perpetual seething enters a new register, so it’s a relief to everyone when he sets sail on a boat full of church pews, leaving wife and incomer to fend for themselves. Cinematographer Ed Rutherford, who worked wonders for Joanna Hogg on Archipelago and Exhibition, skilfully marks the tonal shift from shadowy storm clouds to hallucinogenic sunshine, leaving Riseborough and Anderson to frolic briefly in this fragile new Eden, awaiting the returning tempest. Writer-director Corinna McFarlane counterposes Bergmanesque interiors with gaping exteriors, while Alastair Caplin’s eerie, evocative score cranks up the searing, brooding mood.

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