Movie basic details
Current status - Released
Total runtime - 111 mins.
Release date - 31-10-2024
Release year - 2024
Genres - Horror, Now Playing Movies, Thriller
Overall ratings and scores for Heretic:
Happiness Score - 7/10, World Popularity Score - 19.703/100, IMDB Score - 7.3, Metascore - N/A, Internet Movie Database - 7.3/10, Rotten Tomatoes - 92%, .
Heretic movie has Total Global Votes - 65, Total IMD Votes - 13,862
Heretic Movie Introduction: Movie Heretic, release year 2024 is written by Scott Beck, Bryan Woods and directed by Scott Beck, Bryan Woods. The leading star-cast in this movie are Hugh Grant, Sophie Thatcher, Chloe East along with the other stars and crew members.
Trailers, Clips, Featurettes and Behind the Scenes
Official Trailer 3
Official Trailer 2
Official Trailer
The Authenticity of 'Heretic' Raises The Stakes Of The Story
Hugh Grant was excited to be edgy as "f***ed up" horror villain in Heretic | BAFTA
Scott Beck and Bryan Woods Talk About Their New Film Heretic At AFI Fest 2024
Movie overview and plot by Nishanath Satyanarayana
Movie in-short: Two young religious women are drawn into a game of cat-and-mouse in the house of a strange man.
Movie story-line: Two young missionaries are forced to prove their faith when they knock on the wrong door and are greeted by a diabolical Mr. Reed, becoming ensnared in his deadly game of cat-and-mouse.
Movie synopsis: Two young religious women are drawn into a game of cat-and-mouse in the house of a strange man.
Highlights - Heretic (2024)
Total budget - $0.00
Total revenue - $0.00
Produced by - A24Beck/WoodsShiny Penny ProductionsCatchLight Studios
Produced in - United States of America
Available languages - English (English),
Homepage URL - https://a24films.com/films/heretic
Awards won / Nominations - N/A
Certificate(s) - AR : +16 AU : MA 15+ AU : MA 15+ BG : 16 CA : 14 EE : K-16 FI : 15 HU : 15A IS : N-16 MX : 16 NL : R16 PA : R PR : 18+ PT : 15 SE : R SE : R SE : R
Lead Actors, Writer(s), Director(s) of Heretic (2024)
Lead Actors - Hugh Grant, Sophie Thatcher, Chloe East
Writer(s) - Scott Beck, Bryan Woods
Director(s) - Scott Beck, Bryan Woods
Frequently Asked Questions(FAQ) about Heretic (2024)
What is the release date of Heretic (2024)?
Release date of Heretic (2024) is 31-10-2024.
What is the total runtime of Heretic (2024) in minutes?
Total runtime of Heretic (2024) in minutes is 111 min.
What is the budget consumed to produce Heretic (2024) movie?
The budget consumed to produce Heretic (2024) movie is around $0.00.
How much revenue is expected from movie Heretic (2024)?
Expected revenue from movie movie Heretic (2024) is around $0.00.
What is the pupularity of Heretic (2024)?
Worldwide pupularity of Heretic (2024) movie is 19.703%.
What is the name of the production company of film Heretic (2024)?
Production company of film Heretic (2024) is/are A24, Beck/Woods, Shiny Penny Productions, CatchLight Studios, .
Which country the film Heretic (2024) is produced in?
Film production country for the film Heretic (2024) is United States of America, .
Which language the film Heretic (2024) is produced in?
Film Heretic (2024) is produced in English (English), language(s).
Which Genre the film Heretic (2024) belongs to?
Movie Heretic (2024) is categorized under Horror, Thriller genre(s).
Who are the lead actors of the film Heretic (2024)?
Lead actors of the film Heretic (2024) are Hugh Grant, Sophie Thatcher, Chloe East.
Who is the writer of the film Heretic (2024)?
The writer(s) of the film Heretic (2024) is/are Scott Beck, Bryan Woods.
Who is the director of the film Heretic (2024)?
The director(s) of the film Heretic (2024) is/are Scott Beck, Bryan Woods.
Which awards, nominations and recognitions are won by Heretic (2024) movie?
Movie Heretic (2024) has N/A awards and nomination in it's profile.
What is the story of Heretic (2024) in-short?
Short plot of movie Heretic (2024): Two young religious women are drawn into a game of cat-and-mouse in the house of a strange man..
What is the full story of Heretic (2024) movie?
Full plot of movie Heretic (2024): Two young religious women are drawn into a game of cat-and-mouse in the house of a strange man..
Where to find full details of Heretic (2024) movie?
You can find the full details of movie Heretic (2024) at https://www.imdb.com/title/tt28015403
Where to stream or watch movie Heretic (2024) online?
You can stream or watch online movie Heretic (2024) on .
List of full Starcast and crew members of Heretic (2024)
Full Starcast:
Name: Sophie Thatcher
Character: Sister Barnes
Name: Chloe East
Character: Sister Paxton
Name: Hugh Grant
Character: Mr. Reed
Name: Topher Grace
Character: Elder Kennedy
Name: Elle Young
Character: Prophet
Name: Julie Lynn-Mortensen
Character: Pedestrian
Name: Haylie Hansen
Character: Teenager
Name: Elle McKinnon
Character: Teenager
Name: Hanna Huffman
Character: Teenager
Name: Miguel Castillo
Character: Neighbor
Name: Anesha Bailey
Character: Neighbor
Name: Stephanie Lavigne
Character: Believer
Name: Wendy Gorling
Character: Disciple
Name: River Codack
Character: Missionary #1 (uncredited)
Name: Carolyn Adair
Character: Driver with Car (uncredited)
Crew Members:
Name: Philip Messina
Department: Art
Job/Role: Production Design
Name: Hamish Purdy
Department: Art
Job/Role: Set Decoration
Name: Liliane Bedford
Department: Production
Job/Role: Co-Producer
Name: Scott Beck
Department: Production
Job/Role: Producer
Name: Betsy Heimann
Department: Costume & Make-Up
Job/Role: Costume Design
Name: Justin Ludwig
Department: Art
Job/Role: Art Direction
Name: Bryan Woods
Department: Production
Job/Role: Producer
Name: Justin Li
Department: Editing
Job/Role: Editor
Name: Monica Huppert
Department: Costume & Make-Up
Job/Role: Makeup Department Head
Name: Chung Chung-hoon
Department: Camera
Job/Role: Director of Photography
Name: Jeannie Chow
Department: Costume & Make-Up
Job/Role: Hair Department Head
Name: Stacey Sher
Department: Production
Job/Role: Producer
Name: Jeanette Volturno
Department: Production
Job/Role: Producer
Name: Katie Aquino
Department: Production
Job/Role: Associate Producer
Name: Kai Raka
Department: Production
Job/Role: Co-Producer
Name: Julia Glausi
Department: Production
Job/Role: Producer
Name: Chris Bacon
Department: Sound
Job/Role: Music
Name: Crystal Remmey
Department: Production
Job/Role: Production Manager
Name: Janice MacIsaac
Department: Costume & Make-Up
Job/Role: Costume Supervisor
Name: Michael T. Ryan
Department: Sound
Job/Role: Music Editor
Name: Richard Cowan
Department: Directing
Job/Role: First Assistant Director
Name: Harry Griffin-Beale
Department: Art
Job/Role: Construction Coordinator
Name: Chris Duesterdiek
Department: Sound
Job/Role: Production Sound Mixer
Name: Natasha Duprey
Department: Sound
Job/Role: Music Supervisor
Name: Kurtis Reeves
Department: Costume & Make-Up
Job/Role: Costume Coordinator
Name: Caitlin Groves
Department: Costume & Make-Up
Job/Role: Makeup Effects Designer
Name: Andy Levine
Department: Crew
Job/Role: Post Production Supervisor
Name: Dean Goodine
Department: Art
Job/Role: Property Master
Name: Snežana Savić
Department: Art
Job/Role: Graphic Designer
Name: Amanda Dawn Mitchell
Department: Costume & Make-Up
Job/Role: Key Hair Stylist
Name: Bryan Woods
Department: Writing
Job/Role: Writer
Name: Scott Beck
Department: Directing
Job/Role: Director
Name: Bryan Woods
Department: Directing
Job/Role: Director
Name: Scott Beck
Department: Writing
Job/Role: Writer
Name: Carmen Cuba
Department: Production
Job/Role: Casting
Name: Jennifer Clarke
Department: Crew
Job/Role: Stunt Double
Name: Donavin Kuhl
Department: Crew
Job/Role: Stunt Double
Name: Crystal Mudry
Department: Crew
Job/Role: Stunt Double
Name: Cameron Crowe
Department: Crew
Job/Role: Thanks
Name: Steven Soderbergh
Department: Crew
Job/Role: Thanks
Name: David Lowery
Department: Crew
Job/Role: Thanks
Name: Michael Babcock
Department: Sound
Job/Role: Sound Re-Recording Mixer
Name: Gareth Baird
Department: Sound
Job/Role: Foley Recordist
Name: Aaron Becker
Department: Art
Job/Role: Title Designer
Name: Eddie Redmayne
Department: Crew
Job/Role: Thanks
Name: Fred Raskin
Department: Crew
Job/Role: Thanks
Name: Jonathan Baker
Department: Crew
Job/Role: Thanks
Name: Josh Baker
Department: Crew
Job/Role: Thanks
Name: Pietro Scalia
Department: Crew
Job/Role: Thanks
Name: Greg Kwedar
Department: Crew
Job/Role: Thanks
Name: Michael Davidovitch
Department: Crew
Job/Role: Cast Driver
Name: Serena Caine
Department: Crew
Job/Role: Transportation Captain
Name: Chris Bridges
Department: Costume & Make-Up
Job/Role: Prosthetic Designer
Name: Felix Fox
Department: Costume & Make-Up
Job/Role: Key Makeup Artist
Name: Eugenio Battaglia
Department: Sound
Job/Role: Sound Designer
Name: Humberto Corte
Department: Sound
Job/Role: Sound Effects Editor
Reviews Section
I suppose that many of us have had the god-squad on the doorstep trying to peddle their philosophising but I doubt many are quite as prepared, or as tempting, as the butter-wouldn't-melt "Reed" (Hugh Grant) when the enthusiastic sisters "Barnes" (Sophie Thatcher) and "Paxton" (Chloe East) arrive at his door. Promises of a meeting with his wife and some blueberry pie lure them in and soon they are having a meaningful debate that rather puts the girls on edge. That anxiety only gets worse as there's no sign of the wife and the scented candle proves to have a most unusual, and illuminating, aroma. They conclude that getting out of his home is the best plan, but that isn't going to be straightforward. He has other plans, and they are going to have to play a game of belief/disbelief if they are to have any hope of getting back to their church. The horror aspects of this are not especially interesting - it's a sort of competent hybrid of "Escape Room" meets "Cluedo". What helps this stand out a bit more is a subtly menacing effort from Grant and the standard of the writing. The conversation between the three for the first half of the film is quite thought provoking in itself. It asks questions that are truly valid and worthy of consideration amongst those of or without organised faith. The assertions around "iterations", burgers and games of "Monopoly" also raise a few solid questions about carts and horses that I rather appreciated as we are invited to question or evaluate the whole scope of monotheistic religions and their role in our lives. The two women gel well together here too, realising that they are in some sort of peril - both intellectual and physical, and that latter threat is well demonstrated by some creepy settings and creatively used audio. I didn't love the conclusion - I actually found it really quite disappointing, as if Scott Beck had just run out of ideas or didn't quite have the courage of his earlier convictions, but this is the most substantial part I've seen Grant play in a while and he holds it together well. Not your typical psychological drama and worth a watch, I'd say.
This is a gruesome, bizarre, preposterous, and utterly watchable film. It is a twisted cocktail made surprisingly digestible thanks to Grant's impeccably dapper portrayal of pure malevolence. His performance brings a sinister charm that tempers the madness, making the film's more outlandish horrors feel almost refined.
In the new film “Heretic”, two missionaries named Sister Barnes (Sophie Thatcher) and Sister Paxton (Chloe East) spend their days in fellowship and looking to bring new members into their faith. Sister Paxton is the more sheltered of the two as Sister Barnes comes from the East Coast and joined the church through conversion and appears much wiser in the ways of the world to her colleague. Eager to get her first new member for Sister Paxton; the two venture to visit Mr. Reed (Hugh Grant), who had earlier expressed interest in their church and as such; made his way onto the contact list for the girls. A storm arrives at the same time the girls do but unable to enter the home of Mr. Reed without a female being present; they are assured that his wife is baking in the kitchen and accept his offer to come in out of the weather. They find Mr. Reed charming and very well-versed in theology as he says that he has been studying religions for over a decade and his knowledge is very impressive to the girls yet his questions, answers, and tone start to become disturbing to the girls as does the absence of his wife whom he claims is just in the other room. Looking for a chance to leave, the girls discover that they are locked in and the house has a metal overlay that blocks their cell signals. Further complicating matters is the increasingly odd behavior of Mr. Reed who insists that they are free to leave at any time yet confronts them with all manner of theological questions, theories, and challenges at every turn. What follows is a chilling exercise in faith for the girls in a gripping film that keeps you guessing all along. The cast is solid and Grant is very good playing against type. This is not the usual psycho slasher that audiences often see in films of this type but a deep psychological game of terror and manipulation as he believes that he is helping the girls see the truth amongst all the dogma. The film does play a bit to Hollywood for my taste in the final act as certain revelations and outcomes went away from the clever premise that had been established in favor of more traditional situations, but the vast majority of the film was chilling, engaging, and captivating and was powered by strong performances all around. Directors Scott Beck and Bryan Woods who also wrote the film; are no strangers to Horror and Suspense as their resumes are filled with some very tense films and have crafted a film that works as an intense thriller. 4 stars out of 5
No matter what anyone might say, putting lipstick on a pig doesn’t change the fact that one is still dealing with a pig. And that’s very much the case with this dismally failed attempt at smart horror from writer-directors Scott Beck and Bryan Woods. When two naïve Mormon missionaries (Sophie Thatcher, Chloe East) visit the remote home of a creepy, loquacious middle-aged loner (Hugh Grant) in an attempt to convert him, the trio launches into a protracted conversation about the nature of “the one true religion.” To a certain extent, it’s an intriguing philosophical discussion – at least for a while – until it gradually descends into a series of longwinded fits and starts characterized by disjointed, unrelated, unresolved segments that try viewer patience. The dialogue increasingly amounts to a series of overwrought contrivances undermined by implausible character development, particularly among the two supposed innocents who begin spouting lines that are difficult to accept in light of their supposedly gullible, unsophisticated nature and narrow worldview. But then, in a desperate attempt to retain fading audience attention, the picture degenerates into little more than a meandering slasher movie, albeit with better production design than one typically finds in such fare. What’s more, this offering’s exasperating script heavily “borrows” from an endless stream of religious, philosophical and cinematic sources, one even suggesting that this could turn into the second coming of “The Butterfly Effect” and “Matrix” franchises. And, while Grant and his co-stars genuinely deliver more than capable portrayals of the three principals, even their performances aren’t enough to cover the inherent weaknesses of this material, no matter how much lipstick is applied to it. Considering the foregoing, I’m truly mystified by the much-celebrated response this offering has been accorded given its tiresome narrative and pretentious, largely pointless overall direction, an experiment that just doesn’t work. As a fan of the smart horror genre and its aim of elevating the content of more classic releases in this area of cinema, I’m seriously disappointed that the inspired creators of “A Quiet Place” (2018) haven’t come up with something better here, an outcome that’s definitely heretical in itself.
Written and directed by Scott Beck and Bryan Woods (65, Haunt, writers of A Quiet Place), Heretic is a so-called psychological horror that is disappointing on all fronts. After only seeing the trailer once months ago, I initially thought that Heretic was a film about a serial killer (Hugh Grant) who used his crazy mouse trap-contraption house to lure in religious, door-to-door service people and kill them. While that is partially the case, Heretic follows two missionaries from The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints; Sister Barnes (Sophie Thatcher, The Book of Boba Fett) and Sister Paxton (Chloe East, The Wolf of Snow Hollow). The two women go to the house of Mr. Reed (Grant) who has expressed interest in hearing more about their religion. As Sister Barnes and Sister Paxton make their way inside, they soon find themselves trapped in Mr. Reed’s bizarrely intricate home featuring electricity on a timer, a front door that supposedly won’t open again until morning, and that the house being made of metal blocks cell phone signals. Reed, a theology major with vast knowledge of all religions, claims to have found the one true religion. Whether the two women will escape or if Reed knows what he’s talking about is factors into the cerebral aspect of the film. Martin Freeman constantly looked miserable and bored out of his mind when he appeared in films like The Hobbit trilogy or the Sherlock TV series. He suddenly looked like he was having the time of his life when he shifted film genres, plunged into horror, and starred in the 2017 film Ghost Stories. It seems to be the same case for Hugh Grant. While this isn’t his first horror film, Heretic is his first film in the genre in 36 years (Grant starred in The Lair of the White Room in 1988). Grant is noticeably lively in his performance in Heretic though and seems downright giddy to be torturing people. With cinematography by Chung Chung-hoon (Last Night in Soho, The Handmaiden), Heretic has two visually memorable sequences thanks to how they’re shot. When Sister Barnes and Sister Paxton first arrive, Mr. Reed leaves the room to check on his “wife.” While he’s gone, Barnes turns the candle he blew out and discovers what the scent of the candle is. As she slowly turns the candle, the camera turns with it. Reed has a miniature duplicate of his house complete with little figures that represent Sister Barnes and Sister Paxton. In a sequence when Sister Paxton is trying to run away from Mr. Reed, we’re following her movements in the miniature but it seamlessly transitions from the model to the real thing when she enters the room and slams the door. The method in which Heretic is written is somewhat odd. Not quite horrific enough to be scary with its religion-defying dialogue taking center stage, Heretic is essentially a two-hour sermon attempting to destroy your faith with some splashes of blood and a raggedy woman or two dying in a blueberry pie. It feels like if you walked into Heretic devoted to the Mormon religion, you’ll walk out of the theater a different person. Mr. Reed’s arguments regarding all religions stemming from the same concept are portrayed in a way that is believable and convincing. He somehow rambles about Monopoly and board games, music, and vinyl records to demonstrate similarities between certain board games, how some songs are essentially the same tunes with different lyrics, and that all religions are more similar than dissimilar. While the dialogue-driven film can be interesting, it’s also fairly boring. There’s an unsettling aspect to Mr. Reed’s behavior that capitalizes on the tension in the film. But there are also these long stretches where nothing happens besides the next topic of conversation or a weak payoff where someone’s throat is cut with a box cutter or something. Heretic is beautifully shot with a stellar performance from Hugh Grant, but its intriguing concept is drowned out by the desire to deconvert the audience and have a lukewarm reveal regarding whatever the one-true religion is. Watching the film is like being trapped in a church of a religion you don’t believe in with an overwhelmingly passionate pastor trying to dissuade you from ever coming back.
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