Queen of Earth is the scariest movie of the summer

Alex Ross Perry's claustrophobic drama follows Elisabeth Moss through a bottomless downward spiral

"Queen of Earth"
(Image credit: Courtesy photo)

The scariest movie I've seen this year is Alex Ross Perry's strange, mesmerizing Queen of Earth. Essentially a two-hander, Queen of Earth follows Catherine (Elisabeth Moss) and Ginny (Katherine Waterston) as they spend a week at a cabin owned by Ginny's wealthy parents. In flashbacks, we see that they took the same trip a year earlier, though Catherine brought a boyfriend. This year, the boyfriend is gone, and Catherine is struggling. Some of her problems are understandable: grief over the end of her relationship and the death of her father. Others are stranger — like, say, her complaints that her bones are constantly grinding under her skin.

Perry often shoots his actresses in close-up, but in Queen of Earth, the effect doesn't lead to intimacy — it leads to claustrophobia. The film begins with a showstopper of a scene in which Catherine sobs and snarls her way through a nasty breakup. (When I first saw the film at BAM Cinemafest in June, I was convinced there was something wrong with the sound mix. When I saw it again, I realized the scene was supposed to be that abrasive and ear-splitting.)

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Scott Meslow

Scott Meslow is the entertainment editor for TheWeek.com. He has written about film and television at publications including The Atlantic, POLITICO Magazine, and Vulture.