May 24, 2026

Victorian Psycho, Jason Isaacs, Maika Monroe, Thomasin McKenzie
Cannes Dispatch festival ticket
Victorian Psycho, Jason Isaacs, Maika Monroe, Thomasin McKenzie

CANNES DISPATCH
Photographs by GREG WILLIAMS
Interview by
JANE CROWTHER


Ruth Wilson describes herself as a ‘Cannes virgin’ when she sits down with Hollywood Authentic on the roof of the Palais de festival and we look down on the crowds and red carpet below. ‘It’s sometimes a bit absurd. I love it. What a wonderful thing to have in celebration of film. But the film is also separate from the other stuff – the side shows. It’s great for people watching.’ People watching is something of a full time occupation for actors and Wilson has arrived at the festival with a film its director, Zachary Wigon, calls ‘demented’. In Victorian Psycho, based on Virginia Feito’s book, she plays Mrs Pounds, the 19th century lady of Ensor House where governess Winifred Notty (Maika Monroe) arrives to care for her two children. Winifred is a Jane Eyre type with blood lust, a woman who struggles to tamp down her murderous instincts while sparring with her snooty employer. A comedy horror that reclaims the genre for women, it shares some sensibilities with Teenage Sex and Death at Camp Miasma which opened the festival’s Un Certain Regard section. 

Victorian Psycho, Jason Isaacs, Maika Monroe, Thomasin McKenzie

There’s a sense that in horror movies women were always the victims, running around in t-shirts and getting wet. So it is exciting to be in a project where the women are the ones in power, taking revenge, are having the fight,’ says Wilson. It’s not the first time she’s dabbled in psychopathic characters – she’s played Alice in Luther since 2010, a trailblazer for unapologetic on-screen women. ‘I love playing those things that are usually attributed to men. It feels like freedom as a performer, as a female.’ There’s also a through-line from Victorian Psycho to Wilson’s breakout role, when she played Jane Eyre in the BBC’s 2006 adaptation of the Charlotte Brontë novel. Many of the tropes of that celebrated tale are subverted and questioned in Victorian Psycho to viciously amusing effect. Wilson is currently reading Villette by Brontë and thinks the rebelliousness of the genre has always been there. ‘She writes very complicated, interesting, funny, dry-witted women. It’s sort of misconceived somehow.’

Victorian Psycho, Jason Isaacs, Maika Monroe, Thomasin McKenzie

Wilson was drawn to the project because of its comedy as well as playing the other side of the Jane Eyre coin – lady of the house rather than ingénue governess. ‘I’d just done a really intense play, which was wonderful, with Michael Shannon [A Moon For The Misbegotten at the Almeida], and I was like, ‘This will be a palate cleanser in its own way’. There’s something really juicy, funny and satirical about it, as well as being violent and gory. There’s something about [Mrs Pounds] – that repression, which is really interesting. When Winifred comes in, there’s a sort of disgust and desire line – a very fine line between the two with her. She’s as psychopathic as Maika’s character in some ways.’

The idea of women being pitted against each other isn’t something new, she reflects. ‘I don’t think it’s modern, it’s always been the case. A repressed group of people will fight for their own freedom – and maybe at the expense of someone else in their group. You’d hope we’d all help each other out, but that’s not always the case. It delves into that female dynamic.’ There’s also something recognisable in the way actresses are measured against each other and the prizing of youth. Wilson nods. ‘I think it’s a really interesting time, actually, for women, and it’s great to have those amazing actors ahead of me, who are ploughing that furrow for me. Your career’s not over in your 40s. It’s only getting more interesting, and that’s really exciting for me. And it’s lovely to see yourself reflected on screen. I’ve just worked with Emma Thompson [on Down Cemetery Road], and she’s an action hero. She’s being blown up, chased and shot at. And she’s like, ‘I’ve never done action. I’m doing action roles in my 60s’. I love that.’

Victorian Psycho, Jason Isaacs, Maika Monroe, Thomasin McKenzie

Coming up she’s returning to the Luther world alongside Idris Elba in the second film of the series. ‘Well, she’s not dead, which is great,’ she laughs when asked what we might expect from Alice, who seemingly died at the end of season five, falling from scaffolding. ‘I hadn’t played her for seven years so stepping back inside her, it was like, ‘Wow, this is interesting. How do I do this?’ But the dynamic is so instinctive with Idris and she comes back a bit darker.’ Given she’s a murderer and a psychopath, how much darker? ‘Darker…’ is all she’ll tease before she goes back to observing the circus on the Cannes Croisette.


Photographs by GREG WILLIAMS
Interview by JANE CROWTHER
I See Buildings Fall Like Lightning premiered at the 79th Cannes Film Festival

Words by JANE CROWTHER


Mona Fastvold’s biopic of the leader of the Shaker religious movement is as unconventional and deliberate a piece of cinema as her last project, the lauded, bum-numbing The Brutalist, which she also co-wrote with her partner Brady Corbet. Incorporating interpretive dance and sung hymns into her story of an 18th century Manchester lass touched by God and inspiring a movement, Fastvold asks audiences to feel the fervour and radical departure presented by Lee, rather than suck up a history lesson in Shakerism. For some viewers, that may feel as though Lee is untethered, lacking in context, as she negotiates growing from a persecuted girl to a leader in the New World. For others it’s a welcome change to the usual cradle-to-grave recounting of historical figures – an invigorating glimpse into an untold life. 

Amanda Seyfried, Christopher Abbott, Lewis Pullman, Stacy Martin, Thomasin McKenzie
Searchlight Pictures

When we first meet Ann (Amanda Seyfried) in the North of England, she is poor and insignificant until she becomes famous for believing herself to be the second messiah – a bold statement in a Christian patriarchal society. Married to Abraham (Christopher Abbott), worshipped by her brother William (Lewis Pullman) and believing that the divine is channelled through devotees via involuntary, ecstatic spasms during prayer, Ann is soon leading a local sect and gathering a community together who abide by the rules of celibacy and physical veneration. In candlelit drawing rooms the cast sway, vibrate and whip their bodies around while singing and stomping, the rhythm and cinematography as seductive as the lure of a new way of approaching Christianity for Lee’s followers.

Amanda Seyfried, Christopher Abbott, Lewis Pullman, Stacy Martin, Thomasin McKenzie
Searchlight Pictures
Amanda Seyfried, Christopher Abbott, Lewis Pullman, Stacy Martin, Thomasin McKenzie
Searchlight Pictures

Imprisoned (and singing from her cell) Ann needs to find a place where her new ideas have the freedom to blossom, where a woman can preach, where new beliefs and immigrants are welcomed. It’s perhaps ironic in today’s political landscape to watch the Shakers set sail to the promised land of upstate New York, where the community grows (and makes excellent furniture). But by the time that Ann is getting grey-haired, after grief has diminished her, it’s hard to determine the takeaway for audiences in this deliberately woozy, slippery and insular portrait. Though the cultural and sociological imprint of Lee may be untapped, audiences will be certain of one thing: that Seyfried should have been in the awards conversation this year for her full-bodied, robust performance.

Amanda Seyfried, Christopher Abbott, Lewis Pullman, Stacy Martin, Thomasin McKenzie
Searchlight Pictures

Words by JANE CROWTHER
Pictures courtesy of Searchlight Pictures
The Testament of Ann Lee premiered at the 82nd Venice Film Festival and is in cinemas now

September 5, 2025

Amanda Seyfried, Lewis Pullman, Mona Fastvold, The Testament of Ann Lee, Thomasin McKenzie
AS Festival Ticket
Amanda Seyfried, Lewis Pullman, Mona Fastvold, The Testament of Ann Lee, Thomasin McKenzie

Photographs by GREG WILLIAMS
Words by JANE CROWTHER


Amanda Seyfried let loose while making her unconventional biopic of Ann Lee, the 18th century leader of religious group, the Shakers – famous for their convulsions, dancing and vocalisation during their worship. Born in Manchester, Ann experienced visions, believed herself to be the second incarnation of Christ and was radical in her teachings. In Mona Fastvold’s film, The Testament Of Ann Lee (which was co-created with The Brutalist writer-director Brady Corbet), Lee is portrayed by Seyfried as a force of nature, inspiring followers and challenging societal norms. When she prays she and the cast dance and move while singing original Shaker hymns, grunting, keening and screaming in a kind of orgiastic ritual.

Amanda Seyfried, Lewis Pullman, Mona Fastvold, The Testament of Ann Lee, Thomasin McKenzie

‘This did feel like an opportunity where there were just no tethers to anything,’ Seyfried told the press in Venice as the film debuted there. ‘Basically, I follow Mona into the light and anything goes because there’s so much freedom, and the only threat is to not use that freedom to your advantage as an artist to go as far deep as you can go to make the craziest sounds. I’ve never been let loose in this way.’

Amanda Seyfried, Lewis Pullman, Mona Fastvold, The Testament of Ann Lee, Thomasin McKenzie

‘The reason I was able to face these challenges as an artist, was because I felt completely protected, held up and surrounded by loving artists, and in a place where everybody knew the value of making this, and understood Mona’s vision. I have to say it, this was incredibly rare and might never happen again.”

Amanda Seyfried, Lewis Pullman, Mona Fastvold, The Testament of Ann Lee, Thomasin McKenzie

Unlike Ann, Seyfried admits she wasn’t always sure of herself. ‘I kept saying [to Mona], ‘go with somebody English,’ because the accent seemed so hard. But she believed in me, and so I believed in me, and here we are.’ Fastvold told journalists that her star possessed the necessary wildness to inhabit the role. ‘Amanda has a lot of power. She’s very strong, a wonderful mother, and she’s a little mad. I knew she could access those things. I saw Amanda was ready to go full force.’

Amanda Seyfried, Lewis Pullman, Mona Fastvold, The Testament of Ann Lee, Thomasin McKenzie

Photographs by GREG WILLIAMS
Words by JANE CROWTHER

The Testament of Ann Lee premiered at the 82nd Venice Film Festival
Released in cinemas at a later date
Amanda Seyfried wears Prada and Tiffany & Co. jewels