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Cleaner Movie Review: Daisy Ridley shines in a slick but shaky action ride

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Cleaner Movie Review: Daisy Ridley shines in a slick but shaky action ride
Story: When activists seize a skyscraper gala, ex-soldier-turned-window-cleaner Joey (Daisy Ridley) finds herself stranded outside. With her brother among the hostages, she must scale the building and outwit the attackers to save him and everyone inside.Review: In

Cleaner

, director Martin Campbell returns to familiar territory: the taut, high-concept action thriller. But while the film showcases his well-known flair for vertical spectacle and tension-filled set pieces, it never fully transcends its genre roots or narrative implausibilities. Anchored by a committed Daisy Ridley, the film is a functional but uneven ride—elevated by direction, hindered by writing. Set in a gleaming London skyscraper,

Cleaner

introduces Joey Locke (Ridley), an apathetic ex-soldier turned window cleaner with a tragic past and a climbing habit rooted in childhood trauma. As her precarious job takes her to the building’s upper floors, eco-terrorists storm an executive gala inside, triggering a hostage crisis. Joey—stranded on the outside—becomes the only person capable of intervening, especially with her younger brother Michael (Matthew Tuck) trapped within. The setup is, admittedly, far-fetched. A former military operative conveniently moonlighting as a skyscraper window washer is the kind of pulpy premise that only works if the film embraces its absurdity.

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Cleaner

does, to an extent. Screenwriters Simon Uttley, Paul Andrew Williams and Matthew Orton leans heavily on genre nostalgia, drawing clear inspiration from

Die Hard

and even

The Towering Inferno

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, borrowing not only their structure but also their sense of contained chaos. Campbell’s direction brings polish to the proceedings, and his eye for height-induced anxiety is sharp as ever. The film’s best moments come when it forgets its dialogue and lets Ridley dangle, climb, and fight against gravity and odds. But for all its kinetic energy,

Cleaner

falters in the writing. The dialogue is often unnecessarily heavy and sluggish, flattening emotional beats and undercutting tension. Joey’s competence verges on implausible, removing real stakes from what should feel like a desperate, near-impossible mission. The film wants to paint her as vulnerable yet unstoppable—but in making her too capable, it strips the story of suspense. That said, Ridley carries the film with quiet intensity. Unlike the usual action heroes, she stays serious and determined. Her scenes with Tuck bring surprising emotional weight, offering glimpses of tenderness in a film otherwise propelled by gunfire and grappling hooks. Their sibling dynamic is one of the film’s few grounded elements, even if it occasionally feels underwritten. The antagonists, led by Taz Skylar’s Noah, provide chaotic opposition but lack ideological nuance. The film hints at internal divisions within the eco-terrorist group—between moral protest and violent extremism—but ultimately sidesteps the ethical debate in favor of more explosions. Clive Owen, in a blink-and-miss role, is underutilized and fails to inject the gravitas his presence promises. In the end,

Cleaner

is a serviceable action movie. It’s well-directed, competently acted, and delivers enough suspense to keep you watching. But weak writing and surface-level themes stop it from being more than just another decent thriller. For fans of the genre, it’s worth a watch—but don’t expect it to leave a lasting impression.

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Movie Reviews

Keeper review – romance goes to hell in effectively eerie horror

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Keeper review – romance goes to hell in effectively eerie horror

For the past few years, horror cinema has sometimes felt as fraught with toxic romance as a particularly cursed dating app. From manipulated meet-cutes (Fresh; Companion) to long-term codependence (Together) to the occasional success story (Heart Eyes), it’s clear that romantic relationships are mostly blood-stained hell, and a couple going to a secluded location together is a fresh level of it.

So it’s not surprising when Liz (Tatiana Maslany) starts to feel uneasy on her weekend away with Malcolm (Rossif Sutherland) early on in the new and much-concealed horror movie Keeper. Liz and Malcolm have been together for about a year, which we gather early on has marked the time Liz has bolted from past relationships. Still, she seems optimistic about this one. She thinks she knows Malcolm pretty well, and their early scenes together are neither as dotted with red flags nor as suspiciously idyllic as other recent characters in the doomed-couple genre. Liz has a wary, deadpan sense of humor, and Malcolm has a slightly slurred-together accent as he explains some oddities about his family-owned cabin in the woods (like the fact that he has a creepy cousin who lives nearby). But their awkwardness levels are complementary. They seem comfortable together.

Osgood Perkins, the director, introduces discord through his shot choices, rather than micro-aggressions or backstory. Liz and Malcolm’s faces are rarely outright hidden, but they’re often partially obscured, shown from odd angles, or framed in shots with a disconcerting amount of headroom. This establishes a pattern of disorientation that continues as Liz thinks she hears faint noises through the house’s vents. When she relaxes in the house’s posh tub, there’s an intensely memorable superimposition of the nearby river rushing all around her, as if she’s about to transcend space and time. “I feel like I took mushrooms,” she tells a friend she calls when she’s left alone at the cabin. Her friend asks if she did, in fact, take mushrooms; Liz doesn’t answer directly.

For a while, Keeper – named for Liz’s supposed status as the woman in Malcolm’s life – seems like it could go in any number of directions, its horror elements mixed together in a dreamlike jumble. Is it a ghost story, a slasher-in-the-woods movie, or just a really bad trip? Perkins, a horror specialist who has been on a prolific run for the past 18 months with another movie due out next year, makes it difficult to tell, both in-movie (so many of the creepiest early moments are moments just out of focus or in the corner of the eye) and extra-textually; his last two films were the tonally distinct serial-killer freakout Longlegs and the Final Destination-ish horror comedy The Monkey. This eclecticism, combined with Keeper’s elusive and spoiler-averse ad campaign, could make the new film feel to some like a shell game designed to dress up what is, at its core, a pretty simple horror story.

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Maybe it is that. But part of what makes Perkins’ film so refreshing is the way it prioritizes its visceral effect on an audience over a desire to bend that story into a modern relationship parable. As clever as so many contemporary horror movies are, they often write toward theme rather than shooting toward immediacy. As a result, some are starved for original imagery, unexpected juxtapositions or a sense of genuine, uncanny mystery. Keeper has all of this, and Perkins knows just how far to push those elements without allowing the movie to become abstract woo-woo self-indulgence.

He also seems to know what a powerful grounding element he has in Maslany, who isn’t called upon to do the usual virtuoso demo reel of a woman on the verge of oblivion. Liz does get freaked out by the strange things that happen around her, and the character is written and performed with a certain directness. (She’s not one of those horror heroines who inexplicably avoids asking what the hell is going on.) Yet Maslany delivers a second level to her performance in her unguarded moments: a cynical flick of her eyes in one direction or another, the tenuousness of her more polite smiles, the shorthand of both her familiarity and quickness to irritation with her unseen friend on the phone. Though no particular skeleton key to her traumatic past awaits, the character still feels complete.

That’s true of the movie as a whole, too. It’s not as rich as Sinners nor as narratively ambitious as Weapons, two of 2025’s standard-bearers for original horror. But when Keeper finishes up, its tight confines feel satisfying, correct and unlikely to spawn a sequel. That tidiness drives home some of its themes in a way that the more overt messaging of other dating-hell stories don’t always manage: maybe it takes a fable-like horror for the messy business of relationships to stay so neatly kept.

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Movie Reviews

Rebuilding (Christian Movie Review) – The Collision

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Rebuilding (Christian Movie Review) – The Collision

About the Film 

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On the Surface

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For Consideration

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Beneath The Surface

Engage The Film

Rebirth

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  • Nyah is an Atlanta-based filmmaker who specializes in screenwriting, directing, and costuming. She joined The Collision in September 2025 to help more and more believers engage in culture without losing their faith. She hopes to one day write and direct independent films and documentaries with her friends. Coming 2026, she will be Nyah Phillips!



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Movie Reviews

‘The Carpenter’s Son’ Review: Nicolas Cage and FKA Twigs Headline a Biblical Horror Film So Bad It’s (Almost) Good

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‘The Carpenter’s Son’ Review: Nicolas Cage and FKA Twigs Headline a Biblical Horror Film So Bad It’s (Almost) Good

The charges of “Blasphemy!” are likely to come fast and furious for Lotfy Nathan’s supernatural horror film revolving around the life of the teenage Jesus. Based on the apocryphal “Infancy Gospel of Thomas” (which I confess I haven’t read), the film strains mightily for a seriousness that it never deserves. I mean, when you cast Nicolas Cage as “The Carpenter” and FKA Twigs as “The Mother,” you’re already kind of throwing in the towel.

Despite its handsome production values and an arresting performance by Isla Johnston (The Queen’s Gambit) as “The Stranger,” who turns out to be, wait for it, Satan, The Carpenter’s Son will please neither the faithful nor those looking for a more traditional fright film in which the Devil makes an appearance.

The Carpenter’s Son

The Bottom Line

Jesus Christ!

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Release date: Friday, November 11
Cast: Nicholas Cage, FKA Twigs, Noah Jupe, Isla Johnston, Souheila Yacoub
Director-screenwriter: Lotfy Nathan

Rated R,
1 hour 34 minutes

Set largely in “Anno Domini 15,” the story takes place in Roman-era Egypt, where Joseph and Mary (let’s not be coy about this) are going about their daily lives while being understandably protective of their 15-year-old son Jesus (Noah Jupe, reuniting with Twigs after Honey Boy). So Joseph gets understandably perturbed when his son begins hanging out with a mysterious stranger with haunting eyes.

“I play games all day. Will you play with me?” the stranger asks Jesus, which provides a subtle clue that he may be up to no good. Not to mention his propensity for playing with scorpions.

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Soon enough, Jesus finds himself increasingly drawn to the stranger, much to his father’s consternation. “My faith has become a broken crutch!” Joseph exclaims, in the way that only Nicolas Cage can. The villagers are equally upset, becoming convinced that the carpenter’s son and his new friend are evil spirits. A reasonable assumption, considering that highly aggressive snakes are starting to emanate from people’s mouths. Meanwhile, Jesus understandably begins to suffer daddy issues: “Tell me who my father is!” he implores the stranger.

Writer-director Nathan (12 O’Clock Boys), who grew up in the Coptic Orthodox Church, seems to be sincere in his attempt to present a Biblical narrative from a very different perspective. The Carpenter’s Son is nothing if not solemn, presented with all the gravitas of a ‘50s-era religious epic as if directed by John Carpenter. The performers are equally committed, although Cage immediately sends out campy vibes. Not so much from his performance, which is relatively restrained, but his mere presence. That’s simply what happens when you cast the actor who starred in Ghost Rider: Spirit of Vengeance and Mandy as Joseph.

Since Twigs and Jupe have no such cinematic baggage, they fare much better. But the real standout is Johnston, whose eyes are so mesmerizing that it’s easy to see why Jesus falls under the stranger’s spell. The actress, who will soon be playing the lead role in Baz Luhrmann’s upcoming Joan of Arc pic, has such a compelling screen presence that stardom seems all but assured. Add to that the fact that she can deliver lines like “I am the accuser of light…I am the adversary” with utter conviction and you can see she’s going places.

For all its visual stylishness, The Carpenter’s Son feels like such an essentially misconceived project that it seems destined for future cult status, with audiences at midnight screenings shouting out the more outrageous lines in unison with the actors. Which may not be what the filmmaker intended, but sounds like a lot of fun.

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