 
  Review by
        Eric Hillis
  Directed by: Lee Haven Jones
  Starring: Annes Elwy, Nia Roberts, Steffan Cennydd, Sion Alun Davies,  Julian Lewis Jones
 
    
        The recent folk-horror revival continues in director
          Lee Haven Jones' Welsh language thriller The Feast. As is the remit of the sub-genre, it deals with tensions between
          the past and present, tradition and progress. It also might be
          described as an eco-horror, given its environmental themes. But in
          practice, the sub-genre it most resembles is the rape-revenge
          thriller, but here it's the rape of Mother Earth that's being
          avenged.
      
      
        Politician Gwyn (Julian Lewis Jones) and his Lady Macbeth wife
          Glenda (Nia Roberts) have returned from London to spend time at
          the latter's inherited home. Once a working farm, Glenda's childhood
          home now houses their very modernist home, while farming has given way
          to fracking. The couple's return has been necessitated by the fear of
          scandals involving their two grown-up sons – drug addict Guto (Steffan Cennydd) and cycling obsessed Gweirydd (Sion Alun Davies), whose
          indiscretions are later revealed – whom they've essentially grounded
          to keep them away from the media.
      
      
        Gwyn and Glenda throw a party in the hopes of convincing their
          neighbour Mair (Lisa Palfrey) to allow fracking on her land, a
          process that will be facilitated by the slimy consultant Euros (Rhodri Meilir). To assist with the preparations, Glenda enlists Cadi (Annes Elwy), a shy barmaid from the local pub. Practically mute, Cadi slinks
          around the home like a stray animal that has come into contact with
          humans for the first time. She barely speaks, but she does break into
          a song that surprises Glenda, as it was a ditty often sung to her by
          her mother.
      
      
        As the evening progresses, it becomes clear that Cadi has it in for
          Gwyn and his family. For half of its running time, the movie does a
          great job of teasing out details of Cadi's true nature and ultimate
          intentions. We're allowed enough time to get a sense of who Gwyn and
          his brood are, while Cadi remains deliciously ambiguous. But once it
          lays its cards on the table, The Feast doesn't know
          where to go from that point. In this way it reminded me of Jordan
          Peele's films –
          Get Out
          and
          Us
          – which similarly tease us to a point where they crudely spell out
          their themes and then struggle to reach a satisfying conclusion.
      
      
        The first half of The Feast feels like the work of a
          fascinating new talent, and its subtitles, modernist setting and
          middle class milieu give it the air of a polished Scandinavian
          thriller. But after showing us so much, Jones and writer
          Roger Williams resort to lazily telling us what's really
          happening through leaden dialogue. With a couple of lines, the movie
          abruptly switches from one genre to another, and it feels like a cheap
          insult to an audience that has been fully invested to this
          point.
      
      
        Along with Elwy, who is mesmeric as the ethereal Cadi, Jones does
          enough to suggest he's a filmmaker to keep an eye on in the coming
          years. If he can make an entire movie that plays as well as the first
          half of The Feast, we'll have a real talent on our hands, but his first film doesn't
          satisfy enough to act as more than a calling card.
      
       
