Savage House – first-look review

Peter Glanz’s Savage House is an 18th-century satirical drama set during the Jacobite uprising and a pox epidemic, centering on the financially ruined aristocrats Sir Chauncey and Lady Savage, portrayed by Richard E Grant and Claire Foy respectively. The film employs period aesthetics as commentary on contemporary class hierarchies and social ambition, drawing visual inspiration from Hogarth’s attention to decay and excess. While Grant delivers a twitchy, delusional performance and Foy embodies aristocratic composure, the narrative struggles to synthesize its examination of privilege and political hysteria into a coherent social portrait. The production demonstrates strongest when abandoning comedic ambitions to embrace darker themes of institutional collapse and moral degradation, leveraging candlelit cinematography and elaborate costuming to expose psychological corruption mirrored in crumbling domestic spaces.

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