Baxter’s review published on Letterboxd:
Probably going to have an inverse relationship to this thing as I do with Blackcoat's Daughter, aka that one's grown on me with time and this one...probably won't. But I had a blast watching it! Definitely appreciate Perkin's aggressively empty style that he pushes past just visual and into narrative, everyone (especially the protag) acting with such repression that you'd think they're just like the vacant rooms they occupy. Everyone except pointedly one dude, of course.