
In “The Front Room”, Brandy Norwood plays Belinda Irwin, a woman who has a lot on her plate. Professionally, she’s an anthropology professor who is fed up with being mistreated by her department. On a more personal level, she’s still struggling with the tragic death of her first born son, Wallace. On top of all that, she’s VERY pregnant. It all leads to bouts with anxiety, fear, and uncertainty. But things only get worse once her stepmother-in-law comes into the picture.
“The Front Room” is based on the 2016 short story of the same name from Susan Hill. It is co-written and co-directed by Max and Sam Eggers. If that last name sounds familiar to you, it’s because they are the brothers of acclaimed filmmaker Robert Eggers. Their adaptation is a fascinating and frustrating creation built around some wickedly cool ideas that unfortunately never materialize into much.
While “The Front Room” is a psychological horror film, it has the makings for a really funny dark comedy. We get flashes of it in scenes that had me and the small audience at my screening laughing out loud on several occasions. That is when the movie is at its best. Unfortunately the horror angle isn’t nearly as effective. The Eggers brothers do some genuinely creepy table-setting, but they struggle getting their movie beyond that.

Belinda and her husband Norman (Andrew Burnap) live in a fixer-upper that they’re having a hard time finishing. He is a struggling young attorney who needs to score one more big client to gain a position at his law firm. She loves teaching at her university but finds herself losing opportunities from a dean who refuses to meet with her or take her calls. Both still feel the emotional weight of losing their infant first born which adds an understandable concern for Belinda’s current pregnancy.
To add to their stress, Norman receives a surprise call from his estranged stepmother, Solange (Kathryn Hunter) who informs him that his father has died from stomach cancer. Norman doesn’t want to attend the funeral due to abuse he experienced as a child. He confesses to Belinda that Solange claims to be “Holy Spirit empowered” and her twisted pseudo-religious beliefs led to trauma he still struggles with today.
Belinda convinces Norman to attend the funeral for his father’s sake. After the service, Solange informs Norman and Belinda that it was his father’s will that she leave them their substantial fortune. It would be enough to finish paying for their house and set up their nearly due baby for life. But it comes with one stipulation – Solange would move in with them and live out her remaining days with family. It’s pretty clear to us that it’s a terrible idea, but Norman and Belinda agree to take her in.

It doesn’t take long for the frail and hunched Solange to become a menace. From seemingly small but nagging things like belittling Belinda’s cooking to taking the nursery to be her room. Norman is quickly fed up but Belinda plays mediator to try and make things work. But the situation soon spirals to more sinister depths as Solange’s real motives eventually come into focus.
Hunter is no stranger to playing eccentric characters and it’s no different here. Her shrill gravelly voice is as discomforting as her unapologetically crass demeanor. Hunter does her job in making us as uncomfortable as Belinda and Norman. But the film leans on her too much and she begins to wear out her welcome with the audience before she ever does with the couple. This is compounded by the fact that we get very little in terms of big twists or fun surprises. It’s just Hunter doing essentially the same thing for the duration.
The Eggers brothers do attempt to add an unexpected spin in their film’s final moments. But it and their ending as a whole lands with a thud. And that summarizes “The Front Room”. It’s a movie that has the source material and the ambition to be an eerie, disturbing, yet darkly funny psychological horror experience. But it never takes its cool ideas far enough which leaves us impressed by the course it sets for itself but annoyed by its inability to get where it’s going. “The Front Room” is in theaters now.
VERDICT – 2.5 STARS
































