Hoard Review: Carmoon’s Promising Debut Flirts with Success

Exploring Mental Illness With Empathy and Grace

Maria’s story is one of darkness and light. We first meet her as a young girl in 1980s London, living with her mother Cynthia in a home where the boundaries between cherished treasures and spilled trash have long dissolved. Cynthia sees only beauty in her collections, but eight-year-old Maria sometimes wonders if they are truly happy or if others may see their lives differently.

As the years pass, Maria is sent to live elsewhere. When we meet her again as a young woman, the trauma of her past remains close at hand. As she reconnects with bits of her history, darker feelings resurface too. Into this uncertain time comes Michael, who opens doors Maria thought were best left closed. Their intimate bond offers solace yet stirs deep troubles.

Through it all, Luna Carmoon’s camera watches with empathy but not judgment. We journey with Maria into uncomfortable places and feel her private agonies made public. Though her story unfolds across years, moments cling to us with cinematic clarity. In recalling one woman’s journey through grief and madness, Carmoon crafts a deeply unsettling film that lingers long after in our thoughts.

The Grimy World of Maria

Entering Maria’s world feels akin to being transported to another planet, so uniquely does Luna Carmoon craft her reality. From the cramped bins of her mother’s rundown home to the spotless surfaces of her foster residence, the settings become characters in their own right.

Production designer Tim Sandall outdoes himself by crafting environments bursting with tactile specifics. Stepping into Maria’s first house plunges the viewer neck-deep in a tangled hoard that seeps from room to room. Appliances mingle intimately atop wobbling stacks, and lights twinkle between bags, bursting at the seams. Somehow Carmoon locates pockets of charm amid the squalor, conveying the frayed logic behind each placement through a child’s loving gaze.

Cinematographer Nanu Segal’s camera oozes through cramped corridors in voyeuristic stalking, as though we peel back flaking walls with Maria in search of scraps of the past. Her roaming close-ups savor telling textures now felt underfoot: spilling scraps crinkle underfoot yet shimmer with fairy-lit magic through young eyes. Later, Segal transforms sanctuary into suffocation, dwelling claustrophobically on the clinical surfaces of Maria’s foster home. Space meant to heal instead amplifies her itching restlessness.

Some images show worms viscerally beneath the skin. A mucus-slick rat king becomes the stuff of body horror with its knotted anatomy and twisting stomachs. Yet Carmoon locates poetic tragedy in the mundane, imbuing moments like a mother’s face with lyrical longing.

Her deft touch shifts scenes from tender to unsettling in a single glance. While some sequences push boundaries, Carmoon’s unflinching camera pulls back layers of grime to reveal the humanity festering beneath. Her bracing vision brings the tactile world of repressed grief startlingly to life.

The Strength in Their Roles

There are few parts that could match the demands of Hayley Squires’ Cynthia. She brings fierce love and care to a character living far outside of society’s rules. Yet Cynthia also wrestles with demons that none of us fully see. Squires navigates these depths with grace. She ensures we feel Cynthia’s devotion to Maria before all else, even when her disorders spill into actions many would shun. It is a layered performance that holds our empathy.

Hoard Review

We also witness the beginnings of great talent in Saura Lightfoot Leon and Lily-Beau Leach as the younger and older Maria. Both capture her strong spirit and curiosity for life, even when scarred by loss. As children want to do, Maria sees magic where others see mess. Lightfoot Leon later shows us a young woman haunted by a past forced from her grasp too soon. She brings us into Maria’s sensory world and the memories that rule her steps.

Joseph Quinn takes on a complex role as Michael. On the surface, he presents himself as carefree and cocky. But Quinn shows the cracks within of a man-child stuck between responsibility and fleeing from it. His bond with Maria feels built on mutual need rather than health. Quinn makes us feel both drawn to and unsettled by Michael, never letting us find easy ground.

These performances stick with us like the film’s lingering scents. Each element feels lived-in; nothing is played for effects. The actors sink deeply into their roles, bringing life and empathy to characters society often shuns. They ensure we witness people, not stereotypes. In doing so, they bring an already vivid story into sharp focus and keep us reflecting long after the final frame.

Revisiting the Wounds of the Past

Luna Carmoon’s debut film, Hoard, delves unflinchingly into the effects of mental illness and repressed trauma. At its core is Maria, who develops an intense connection with Michael that causes her own past to come bubbling back up.

We first meet Maria as a child living with her mother, Cynthia, whose hoarding covers their home in piles of collected clutter. Though Cynthia clearly loves her daughter, the extent of her disorder isolates them. When tragedy strikes, Maria is sent away and appears to move on. But within her linger the wounds of losing the all-important bond she and Cynthia shared.

Enter Michael, who sparks in Maria feelings of kinship as outsiders. Through him, Maria’s grief and the urge to recapture her past life resurface. We see her start to hoard items, from trash to feelings, recreating the “catalogue of love” she treasured with Cynthia. Her spiraling actions show how deeply unresolved trauma can remain, only to be triggered later on by circumstance.

Carmoon approaches these heavy subjects unflinchingly, not shying from making the audience uncomfortable. Yet some may feel the depiction of hoarding disorder and mental anguish could offer more nuance. While Maria’s decline captures the all-consuming nature of such conditions, more insight into her inner journey could have provided additional understanding.

Overall, Hoard shines a light on the enduring impact of familial bonds and how loss can reverberate through the years. In its ambitious scope, it illustrates how our pasts have the power to resurface when we least expect it.

Insightful Directorial Vision

Luna Carmoon’s debut feature, Hoard, reveals a deeply imaginative and insightful directing mind. While some elements are reportedly autobiographical, Carmoon’s vision extends well beyond retelling a personal story. She crafts a hypnotic world that feels both intimately detailed and symbolically rich, pulling viewers deep into her characters’ inner experiences.

Carmoon immerses us in the compulsions of her characters and the sensory textures of their lives through an arresting blend of realism and surrealism. Nanu Segal’s exhilarating cinematography enhances this, bringing an enchanting tactility even to scenes of filth and decay. We feel the allure of collecting junk, the ecstasy of bonded “outsiders,”  and later the panic of drowning in memories and madness.

Meanwhile, lingering on expressive faces—particularly breakout performances from Hayley Squires and Saura Lightfoot Leon—Carmoon lays bare the interiority behind outward actions. Through deft non-linear storytelling, she suggests the inheritance and repetition of trauma across generations. The director also spotlights how buried loss can resurface in new forms of compulsion, from obsessive hoarding to unhealthy bonding.

With this richly symbolic yet emotionally tangible feature, Luna Carmoon announces a singular directorial voice. She proves adept at transforming heavy themes like mental illness into an enthralling visual experience, centered on the endurance of human connection against all odds. Hoard stays with viewers long after, as much for its depths of meaning as its depths of sensorial imagination.

Finding Its Feet

While Hoard sets up compelling themes around grief and mental illness, it stumbles somewhat in its stride. Some memorable scenes feel removed from the overall narrative, like certain confrontational sequences that could be trimmed without losing the impact of key moments.

This is particularly noticeable in the second half, where the focus shifts to Maria and Michael’s developing relationship. There’s clearly a strong bond between these damaged characters, but at times their more disturbing antics seem to spin off-course. Tighter editing may have maintained the intrigue while sustaining momentum.

Most disappointing is how the conclusion ties up the emotional arcs. After such a visceral dive into Maria’s trauma and family history, viewers are left wanting more resolution. We don’t get true insight into how she finds footing in the present. The final scenes brush over opportunities to understand her path towards healing.

With a deft directorial hand, these aspects could have been strengthened. But these flaws do not overcome the film’s merits. Through daring performances and an empathetic lens on mental health, Hoard establishes Luna Carmoon as a talent to watch who will only continue growing in skill. While not perfect, this debut shows glimpses of beauty amid the difficult realities it portrays.

The Promise of Luna Carmoon

Luna Carmoon’s debut feature, Hoard, shows the promise of an audacious new filmmaking voice. While the story stretches itself thin in places, Carmoon crafts memorable scenes that burrow deeply under your skin. She isn’t afraid to confront the repellent or surreal, finding humanity even in the most disturbing of imagery.

The two Marias, brought to life so vividly by Lily-Beau Leach and Saura Lightfoot Leon, are haunting creations. Both capture the loneliness of damaged youth with nuance far beyond their years. Joseph Quinn too brings an unsettling intensity to Michael, his role almost demanding too much of the story.

When focusing on Cynthia’s love for her daughter, Carmoon presents mental illness with empathy instead of sensationalism. She understands that what drives their “catalogue of love” goes deeper than its visible mess. You can see why their bond moved Maria so profoundly.

With more experience shaping complex narratives, Carmoon’s vision and technical skills will only grow stronger. Already, she has fearlessly expanded British film’s boundaries by pursuing raw, authentic portraits of outsider characters.

While Hoard reaches further than its grasp at times, it remains a distinctive and unforgettable glimpse into hidden worlds most never see. I believe the best is yet to come from Luna Carmoon, and I can’t wait to see where her boundary-pushing storytelling will take us next.

The Review

Hoard

7 Score

Hoard shows the talent and ambition of Luna Carmoon, but ultimately struggles to cohesively shape its harrowing material into a fully satisfying story. However, in its visceral portraits of loss and community among societal outcasts, the film achieves moments of breathtaking authenticity. Carmoon proves herself a filmmaker with an important voice, even if this first feature is an uneven beginning.

PROS

  • Strong performances from Saura Lightfoot Leon and Hayley Squires
  • Atmospheric setting and production design that immerse the viewer
  • Willingness to tackle difficult themes of mental illness and grief
  • Observant portrayal of outsider communities

CONS

  • The narrative loses focus in the second half and struggles to tie themes together.
  • Some sequences feel designed more to shock than advance the story.
  • Michael's character feels underdeveloped and damages the pacing
  • The ending lacks the impact needed to resolve Maria's arc.

Review Breakdown

  • Overall 7
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