Review: THE RULE OF JENNY PEN is a Twisted and Disturbing Descent into Elderly Horror
The Rule of Jenny Pen is one hell of a disturbing horror movie. It’s got a strong script, sharp direction, and powerhouse performances from Geoffrey Rush and John Lithgow. But let me tell you, this movie is dark. Twisted. Uncomfortable.
It’s the kind of film that burrows under your skin and stays there. And a big part of that is because it tackles something rarely explored in horror… elder abuse.
Some horror movies unsettle you, some scare you, and then there are the ones that are downright punishing. It crawls under your skin, pokes at your nerves, and refuses to let go. This movie delivers one of the most unsettling horror experiences I’ve had in a long time.
I watched this with my wife, and about halfway through, she leaned over and whispered to me, “Why did you take me to see an elderly abuse movie?” And I just kind of let out an unfomforteble chuckle and said, “I’m sorry?”
This is not an easy film to sit through for general audiences, it’s twisted, mean, and filled with a level of psychological torment that makes you want to look away, but you can’t. John Lithgow, playing the elderly psychopath at the heart of the story, is absolutely horrifying.
You despise him, you fear him, and yet, you can’t stop watching. The way he wields his sinister puppet, Jenny Pen, to manipulate and torment the asylum’s residents is nightmare fuel.
The story centers on a judge (Rush) who, after suffering a stroke, finds himself trapped in a rest home, with a limited ability to defend himself.
There, he becomes the unwilling plaything of Lithgow’s character, a deranged patient who enforces his own twisted rule over the asylum using a child's puppet as his instrument of control. The story escalates into a violent confrontation.
This is not a film for everyone. It’s cruel, it’s relentless, and it does not let up. But if you’re a horror fan who appreciates the truly demented, movies that push boundaries and drag you into psychological hell, this is something you need to see. There’s a reason Stephen King called it one of the best movies of the year.
Directed by James Ashcroft and based on an Owen Marshall short story, The Rule of Jenny Pen is the kind of horror film that sticks with you. Ashcroft, working from a script he co-wrote with Eli Kent, created a claustrophobic, nerve-wracking experience.