Film festivals Venice Film Festival 2018

The Mountain

Venice Film Festival 2018: The Mountain | Review

The Mountain’s cinematography sets the bar pretty high at this year’s festival. Heightened by a glorious traditional aspect ratio, the absolute beauty of this picture would be hard to describe with words.

The film is set in the 50s and follows Andy (Tye Sheridan), a quiet young man who loses his mother – confined to a mental hospital – and his father. He meets Dr Fiennes (Jeff Goldblum), the physician who institutionalised his own mother, and embarks on a tour through asylums with him, taking pictures of the doctor’s patients before he performs a lobotomy procedure. Initially emotionally detached, Andy begins to understand and empathise with the inmates, eventually falling in love with one of them (Hannah Gross). Lines between sane and insane suddenly blur.

Goldblum gives one of the best performances of his career as a doctor who refuses to move on from the use of lobotomy and electro shock procedures despite scientific developments showing their lack of benefit. His one-on-one dialogue with Sheridan’s character towards the end of the film is fascinating and hypnotising, and it’s set to linger in the audience’s minds way after the end of the credits.

Despite a masterly monologue from Denis Lavant, there’s a point where the story becomes a little too surreal. His character – a local shaman – will make you uneasy, one of many elements that indie sensation Rick Alverson employs to render the narrative difficult to digest. The American director believes cinema has generally become too easy to consume, and this picture tries to challenge it visually and thematically.

A cameo from Udo Kier and Gross’s natural portrayal of a girl left with no option but to accept the controversial medical treatment make The Mountain a little gem to savour with patience and open-mindedness.

Filippo L’Astorina

The Mountain does not have a UK release date yet.

Read more reviews from our Venice Film Festival 2018 coverage here.

For further information about the event visit the Venice Film Festival website here.

More in Film festivals

Red Sea International Film Festival 2025: Giant

Laura Della Corte

“It’s really complicated. It’s really hard if you put yourself in his shoes”: Nawaf Al Dhufairi, Raghad Bokhari and Lana Komsany on Hijra at Red Sea International Film Festival 2025

Laura Della Corte

“Why didn’t I raise my voice for the Rohingya people?”: Akio Fujimoto on Lost Land at Red Sea International Film Festival 2025

Laura Della Corte

“It felt quite absurd to be part of that social jungle”: Sara Balghonaim on Irtizaz at Red Sea International Film Festival 2025

Laura Della Corte

“When you live with someone with a harsh mental illness, you can really sink with them”: Zain Duraie and Alaa Alasad on Sink at Red Sea International Film Festival 2025

Laura Della Corte

Red Sea International Film Festival 2025: Highlights and interviews with Juliette Binoche, Shigeru Umebayashi, Sir Anthony Hopkins, Idris Elba, and More

Laura Della Corte

“All that matters, I think, is the partnership”: Amira Diab on Wedding Rehearsal at Red Sea International Film Festival 2025

Laura Della Corte

“Modern love – it’s a bit dark”: Anas Ba Tahaf and Sarah Taibah on A Matter of Life and Death at Red Sea International Film Festival 2025

Laura Della Corte

“I believe inside each human being there is an artist”: Mohamed Jabarah Al-Daradji, Hussein Raad Zuwayr and Samar Kazem Jawad on Irkalla – Gilgamesh Dream

Laura Della Corte