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I Am the Pretty Thing That Lives in the House

  • 2016
  • TV-14
  • 1h 29m
IMDb RATING
4.6/10
18K
YOUR RATING
Lucy Boynton in I Am the Pretty Thing That Lives in the House (2016)
Watch Trailer
Play trailer1:34
1 Video
52 Photos
DramaHorrorMysteryThriller

A nervous nurse who scares easily finds herself caring for an ailing horror novelist while living in a house with hidden secrets.A nervous nurse who scares easily finds herself caring for an ailing horror novelist while living in a house with hidden secrets.A nervous nurse who scares easily finds herself caring for an ailing horror novelist while living in a house with hidden secrets.

  • Director
    • Osgood Perkins
  • Writer
    • Osgood Perkins
  • Stars
    • Ruth Wilson
    • Paula Prentiss
    • Bob Balaban
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    4.6/10
    18K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Osgood Perkins
    • Writer
      • Osgood Perkins
    • Stars
      • Ruth Wilson
      • Paula Prentiss
      • Bob Balaban
    • 355User reviews
    • 55Critic reviews
    • 68Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 2 nominations total

    Videos1

    Trailer
    Trailer 1:34
    Trailer

    Photos52

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    Top cast10

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    Ruth Wilson
    Ruth Wilson
    • Lily
    Paula Prentiss
    Paula Prentiss
    • Iris Blum
    Bob Balaban
    Bob Balaban
    • Mr. Waxcap
    Lucy Boynton
    Lucy Boynton
    • Polly
    Brad Milne
    Brad Milne
    • Groom
    Danya Chichagov
    Danya Chichagov
    • Mr. Darling
    • (as Daniel Chichagov)
    Erin Boyes
    Erin Boyes
    • Young Iris
    James Perkins
    • John
    Beatrix Perkins
    • Wendy
    Mellanie Hubert
    Mellanie Hubert
    • Scarlett Roth
    • (as Melanie Hubert)
    • Director
      • Osgood Perkins
    • Writer
      • Osgood Perkins
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews355

    4.617.5K
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    Featured reviews

    3Platypuschow

    I Am the Pretty Thing That Lives in the House: Has character but little else

    The curiously titled I Am the Pretty Thing That Lives in the House opened with interesting visuals and fantastic narration, true be told I was gripped from the outset.

    It tells the story of a nurse who moves in with an old lady who was once a successful author. To say anything more would spoil it, to say anything more would also be difficult as it's rather hard to explain.

    So as mentioned the visuals were great and the narration solid, sadly the visuals don't last and the narration isn't enough to save the film. Not even remotely.

    The film is certainly unique but I'm not quite sure who it'll appeal to, certainly not someone seeking a horror. It's an unusual little slow burning tale that had me interested but all the while I waited for it to get going.

    Alas the movie though charming fails to deliver on any front, at least for me.

    The Good:

    Really unique style

    Great narration

    Bob Balaban

    The Bad:

    Really dull

    Goes nowhere

    Things I Learnt From This Movie:

    Ghosts are made by looking for them but pretending not to see

    28yrs old? Hahahahahahahahahahahaha NO!
    5Sleepin_Dragon

    Missed opportunity, this could have been gripping.

    Gothic horror is such a dismally overlooked genre, so many fascinating concepts to draw in, many many tales, so when one comes along, such as this, my curiosity and anticipation were high. Definitely positives can be taken, it is beautifully told, Ruth Wilson is a superb actress and story teller. The production values are strong, the story intriguing, but, those strong elements are somehow given a disservice by the execution, the delivery is meant to be slow deliberately, but is done in a way that makes the film boring, annoyingly it never seems to come to life, and the ending is woefully inadequate. Maybe my expectations were too high, this was disappointing. 5/10
    6sukanya-samy

    A little wonky but a good watch

    First reviewed on broth of blogs.This movie about a nurse Lily (Ruth Wilson) who comes to take care of an old author, Iris Blum, living alone in a remote house. Iris is almost senile and speaks to Lily only referring to her as Polly. Lily finds out that Polly was Iris's most famous character and she attempts reading one of the books that Iris has written. And something happens.

    The story is simple enough but is still cryptic. I didn't get a few parts but I don't think I care. It is about the forgotten lives in the house. The movie is poetic (literally) and I quite enjoyed it.

    Characterization and Acting (C&A)

    Characterization was done well, I would have probably liked some exposition but I think this movie is supposed to be puzzling. Ruth Wilson plays the part to perfection - scared, vulnerable and alone. She really looks like she is going to have a heart attack anytime. Its totally her show as she probably has 80 minutes screen time of 90 minutes of the movie.

    Sounds and Effects (S&E)

    The background of this movie is just mind blowing. It is the scariest I have heard till date. Has this weird ability to spook you as well even if nothing scary is happening. Full points here. There weren't any jump scares and it is all left to your imagination at the end.

    Cinematography and Visuals (C&V)

    Like I said the movie is poetic. It is slow, there isn't much of a story but it moves you and creeps you out. They didn't overdo the actual horror which works in the movie's favor. The lighting was great and the setting itself eerie. Great stuff.

    Direction and Overall (D &O)

    Overall, the movie looked and sounded great. The acting was really good I thought. Only complaint I have is that maybe it could have had a little more exposition to actually understand some stuff which wasn't clear.

    So here are my scores:

    Plot and Script (P&S)- 1

    Characterization and Acting (C&A) – 1

    Sounds and Effects (S&E) – 2.0

    Cinematography and Visuals (C&V) – 1.5

    Direction and Overall (D &O) – 1

    Overall Score – 6.5 out of 10

    Good watch for Halloween 2016! Just be patient, the movie is not as long as its title!!
    8Perception_de_Ambiguity

    The very essence of Gothic literature in cinematic form

    I would describe 'I Am the Pretty Thing That Lives in the House' as a Gothic short story (or maybe even a Gothic poem) brought to the screen. But forget about all the tropes and visuals that are associated with this genre, it is instead focused on what for me is the essential element of Gothic literature: The dead are alive. This doesn't seem like much to build a narrative on, and the driving force of "Pretty" indeed is not plot, nor characters, nor the solving of a mystery. And while all three things are embedded into its narrative it is first and foremost a tone poem. An important thing about the the-dead-are-alive notion, especially in this film, is that it goes both ways. The living can sense the presence of the dead (AKA ghosts), but the dead actually live on after their death, probably mostly concerned with reliving their past, but they might also be able to sense the living. So who is haunting who?

    Consequently "Pretty" presents a ghost story within a ghost story, to put it in simplified terms. In more concrete terms the plot concerns Lily, a nurse who stays in the house of elderly horror fiction writer Iris Blum, to take care of her until her death, which shouldn't be too far into the future now. But it also wouldn't be too wrong to say that the main character is the house that had a few occupants over the course of its lifetime. I don't mean this in the tired old this-and-that-place-is-like-another-character-in-the-film way, the personality of the house certainly is made up of all the people who lived in it. But writer-director Oz Perkins takes the expression "If these walls could talk" and makes it a reality. It is about the people who lived in the house (or more correctly the people who died in it), but for all intents and purposes the main character is the house itself.

    "Pretty" starts with nurse Lily's first day at the house and her opening narration tells us that she just turned 28 years old, but that she will never be 29. She talks about death, memory and says "From where I am now, I can be sure of only a very few things." One of those things is her name. So right from the beginning we know that Lily (at least Lily as a narrator) is already dead. Logic dictates that what we see on screen are her hazy memories of her short time in the house. Can we trust her words and can we trust what we see?

    In any case, old Iris Blum doesn't talk much. But she keeps calling Lily by the name of Polly. And Lily seems to sense some ghostly presence in the house. Polly, as we soon learn, is the main character of Blum's most famous novel "The Lady in the Walls", a novel of which Blum said it lacks an ending because of "an obligation to be true to the subject" for Polly didn't tell Blum about her ending, but Blum tells us that she is convinced that "as endings go, Polly's was not an especially pretty one." Incidentally there also slowly emerges an ugly, moldy stain on one of the walls in the house that Lily grows concerned about. Is there some connection?

    Perkins leaves the viewer in the dark for most of the film's running time about the concrete connections between all the characters, as slow and eventless as the whole thing is it is difficult to keep track of all the points of view. For example Lily isn't the only one whose voice-over we hear, we also hear and see young Blum as she writes the novel, and we hear and see Polly. Those voices also aren't particularly easy to distinguish, and it gets even more complicated when scaredy cat Lily finally dares to pick up "The Lady in the Walls" to read at least parts of it, the content of which is told from both Blum's and Polly's point of view. Through the viewer's natural desire to know the answers the film evokes ideas on the way as we contemplate all the possible answers. Did Polly really exist? Is she buried behind the wall? Are Lily and Polly somehow the same person? Is Lily a fictional character altogether? Or is Lily only imagining things?

    Like a poem or a song it evokes first and foremost a tone, a mood, and sparks ideas of what it might be about. It takes further readings/listens to find that in between all the lines it actually tells a story, a simple story perhaps, but nevertheless a story. And this is actually how 'I Am the Pretty Thing That Lives in the House' worked for me. The tone and the ideas immediately took hold of me, but it took me two viewings to really make sense of the narrative. This isn't without its drawbacks, because frankly it isn't so much difficult to follow because it floods you with information that you need to sort out, on the contrary, it basically is so eventless that it poses a challenge to stay attentive for the whole time. This was, however, clearly a conscious choice by Perkins, and his approach is nothing if not consequential. But it makes criticisms of the film being "boring" particularly understandable in this case, "Pretty" indeed is very one-note, and unless it is a note you relish or that you learn to relish, it won't be enough for you to satisfyingly get you through a whole feature film.

    As it turned out after two viewings, the solution to the mystery is quite concrete and surprisingly not at all convoluted. Nevertheless the ending for me is as chilling as it is simple, and it beautifully circles back onto itself, like a chorus that keeps coming back, just what you would expect a story told by a ghost to be.
    6gavin6942

    People Hate a Slow Burn

    A young nurse takes care of elderly author who lives in a haunted house.

    This film seems to be getting negative responses from people, at least if I take IMDb as any sort of serious guide. At this time (January 2017) it sits at 4.8, which isn't awful but is certainly far from great. Having now seen the film, I find the low rating surprising. The acting is great, and there is nothing wrong with the film as far as technical matters go.

    My guess is that people have the wrong mindset. The film was promoted by Rue Morgue, among others, and maybe people got caught up in some hype of Oz Perkins or misunderstood. Much like the recent Guillermo del Toro ghost story, people need to see this type of horror (the "gothic romance") as different from what they expect. It might be slower and there will be less blood. But it is about creating a mood, which I think this film does rather well.

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    Related interests

    Mahershala Ali and Alex R. Hibbert in Moonlight (2016)
    Drama
    Mia Farrow in Rosemary's Baby (1968)
    Horror
    Jack Nicholson and Faye Dunaway in Chinatown (1974)
    Mystery
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    Thriller

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Director Oz Perkins includes a few nods to his late father, actor and singer Anthony Perkins, in this film. For example, he includes the song "You Keep Coming Back Like a Song," which is performed by Anthony. Another is a clip from the film "Friendly Persuasion," which starred Anthony.
    • Goofs
      The narrative of the story says the young bride was brought to the house her husband built for her in 1812, but the dress and hairstyle she is wearing, as a ghost, is from the period of the 1850s to the 1860s. Since she was murdered soon after moving into the house, the dress and hairstyle do not match her backstory.
    • Quotes

      Lily: [narrating] I have heard myself say that a house with a death in it can never again be bought or sold by the living. It can only be borrowed from the ghosts that have stayed behind. To go back and forth, letting out and gathering back in again. Worrying over the floors in confused circles. Tending to their deaths like patchy, withered gardens.

      Lily: They have stayed to look back for a glimpse of the very last moments of their lives. But the memories of their own deaths are faces on the wrong side of wet windows, smeared by rain. Impossible to properly see. There is nothing that chains them to the places where their bodies have fallen. They are free to go, but still they confine themselves, held in place by their looking.

      Lily: For those who have stayed, their prison is their never seeing. And left all alone, this is how they rot.

    • Connections
      Featured in Horror's Greatest: Hidden Gems (2025)
    • Soundtracks
      You Keep Coming Back Like a Song
      Written by Irving Berlin

      Performed by Anthony Perkins and Urbie Green & His Orchestra

      Courtesy of RCA Records

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • October 28, 2016 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • Canada
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Soy la cosa bella que vive en esta casa
    • Filming locations
      • Ottawa, Ontario, Canada
    • Production companies
      • Netflix
      • Zed Filmworks
      • Go Insane Films
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 29m(89 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby Digital
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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