A pubescent, stubborn girl with intense dreams that mirror her drawings and real-life, Bernard Rose's "Paperhouse" leaves you thunderstruck with its potent imagery and emotionally grounded real-life drama. It is "Nightmare on Elm Street" except there is no burned jocose villain and no mortality factor in the slasher vein. It is a kid's idea of nightmares where a clear-eyed view of their world makes sense only to them, not to the adults who can't comprehend such horrific visions of wonder. Real-life and dreams seem to intersect and the joy of the film is in its ambiguity and its simplicity.
Charlotte Burke is Anna, a very stubborn, rebellious young girl who is consistently in trouble at a private school and feigns fainting spells and ill health. The girl is as healthy can be - it is just her birthday and she just wants riding lessons. In a moment of ringing truth and those awkward moments where you start to hate your parents, Anna's mother (a sprightly Glenne Headly) is upset that her rambunctious daughter lied and takes her back to school. Almost immediately, something haunted this way comes. Anna begins having strange dreams of that very house she's been drawing. Eventually, she succumbs to her drawings and decides that a young boy (Elliott Spiers) should live there. Unfortunately, there are no stairs and the kid has no mobile use of his legs in a bedroom bereft of furniture. When she draws some legs, we get ceramic legs with no body exterior. Anna tries to erase some details of her drawings but is unable to. When we see the results of her scribbling over these finer details in her constant visit to this forlorn house, it leaves you unprepared and there is a chill felt in your bones.
"Paperhouse" is not like any film I've ever seen before, even from a child's point-of-view. When I first saw it years back, it haunted me in ways that reminded me of "The Changeling." A notable added plus to director Bernard Rose's film is that there are barely any special effects, mostly creepy, mildly stark art direction and a spare-looking, empty, abstract and colorless house that looks like no house you would ever see except in a child's drawing. The walls look like they are made of papier mache. The window's view of a grassy field with ominous clouds and, in one truly terrifying sequence, a blind man appearing with a hammer left me shivering with fright. He resembles Anna's own absentee dad and these scenes are as scary and simplistic in their staging as anything from the Elm Street series. A scene involving the details of a photograph and reliving the moment will make you jump from your chair.
Anna's father is played by Ben Cross, who has the right side head for this film. It may sound strange but I saw a parallel between his rather swelled-looking head and that mysterious house. Perhaps I have had nightmares of this sort (and still infrequently do) about my late father appearing in them and seemingly angry at something I did. Those dreams were inexplicable, frustrating and left me breathless. "Paperhouse" taps into those interminable child-like insights that can fester for a long time.

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