Outcast Review

Outcast
Mary (Dickie) and her son Fergal (Bruton) are on the run from a mysterious hunter (Nesbitt). Mary sets strict rules in place to protect her son from something, but when he meets Petronella (Stanbridge) he starts to break those rules...

by Kim Newman |
Published on
Release Date:

10 Dec 2010

Running Time:

98 minutes

Certificate:

18

Original Title:

Outcast

A gritty urban fantasy with a strong Scots-Irish accent. In the end, it’s a werewolf movie but takes interesting detours to get there. Dour Mary (Kate Dickie) and teenager Fergal (Niall Bruton), fugitives from a magical race, hide on a Scots council estate, pursued by embittered human Cathal (James Nesbitt), claiming his cause is just but projecting a ferocious cruelty. A beast stalks the concrete wastes, disembowelling the unwary (Karen Gillan, cast pre-stardom, is the first guts-on-the-ground victim). A confident mix of traditional magic and social realism, it lays on the grim in the world of the estate, then establishes outsiders who seem like victims but are more dangerous than the locals. As in Red Road, Dickie is outstanding.

Red Road's Dickie excels in this gritty slice of urban horror.
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