The Daily Stream: Spencer Isn’t A Horror Movie, But It Acts Like One

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(Welcome to The Daily Stream, an ongoing series in which the /Film team shares what they’ve been watching, why it’s worth checking out, and where you can stream it.) The Movie: “Spencer” Where You Can Stream It: Hulu

The Pitch: Those bemoaning the fact that horror movies rarely get to sit at the Academy’s table may want to take a look at “Spencer,” Pablo Larraín’s feature-length study of a lost woman finding herself over a brutal weekend with the in-laws. It’s 1991, and the marriage between Diana Spencer, Princess of Wales, and her husband Prince Charles has gone sour. She must navigate the rigors of royal scrutiny at the Queen’s Sandringham estate while battling her own ghosts, and although “Spencer” is not a horror movie, it certainly acts like one when the moment calls for it. We know how the real story eventually ends for the People’s Princess, and so Larraín’s imagining (“A fable from a true tragedy” is how the film introduces itself) takes on the shape of his acclaimed 2016 work, “Jackie,” which follows First Lady Jacqueline Kennedy in the wake of her husband’s assassination. Both focus less on their most sensational catalysts and more on the women they came to define. Boasting a phenomenal sense of atmosphere and character, “Spencer” is not only one of my favorite movies of 2021, but /Film’s Chris Evangelista praised Stewart’s “raw, brilliant” performance and claims “‘Spencer’ will break your heart, but it will bring it warmth, too.”

The Movie: “Spencer”

Where You Can Stream It: Hulu

The Pitch: Those bemoaning the fact that horror movies rarely get to sit at the Academy’s table may want to take a look at “Spencer,” Pablo Larraín’s feature-length study of a lost woman finding herself over a brutal weekend with the in-laws. It’s 1991, and the marriage between Diana Spencer, Princess of Wales, and her husband Prince Charles has gone sour. She must navigate the rigors of royal scrutiny at the Queen’s Sandringham estate while battling her own ghosts, and although “Spencer” is not a horror movie, it certainly acts like one when the moment calls for it. We know how the real story eventually ends for the People’s Princess, and so Larraín’s imagining (“A fable from a true tragedy” is how the film introduces itself) takes on the shape of his acclaimed 2016 work, “Jackie,” which follows First Lady Jacqueline Kennedy in the wake of her husband’s assassination. Both focus less on their most sensational catalysts and more on the women they came to define. Boasting a phenomenal sense of atmosphere and character, “Spencer” is not only one of my favorite movies of 2021, but /Film’s Chris Evangelista praised Stewart’s “raw, brilliant” performance and claims “‘Spencer’ will break your heart, but it will bring it warmth, too.”

Why It’s Essential Viewing

The costuming worms its way into the darkening tone, as well. Wearing a foreshadowy sea-green satin dress that ends up matching the color of the soup served moments later, Diana attends a Christmas Eve dinner punctuated by feelings of judgment and revulsion, which she visualizes the way Susannah York might in Robert Altman’s psycho-thriller “Images”: she claws at the pearls on her neck, and as one plops into the soup, she takes an unblinking bite and chokes down the bitter royal pill. A grotesque psychological horror sequence dripping with subtext, its effect matches that of Nicolas Winding Refn’s “The Neon Demon” in intensity and visual punch.