Paul Feig’s adaptation of Freida McFadden’s bestselling novel The Housemaid is a shiny, pulpy psychological thriller that leans into its soapy drama with various levels of success. Sydney Sweeney stars as Millie, a younger ex-con determined for a contemporary begin, who lands a live-in housemaid gig on the opulent house of the rich Winchesters—Nina (Amanda Seyfried) and her good-looking husband Andrew (Brandon Sklenar). What begins as a seemingly excellent alternative shortly spirals into an internet of temper swings, secrets and techniques, and escalating pressure.
Amanda Seyfried is completely fabulous right here, delivering a standout efficiency because the unstable Nina. She commits absolutely to the character’s wild emotional swings—from charming hostess to plate-smashing maniac—with a vicious, unblinking depth that borders on horror-movie absurdity. Seyfried owns each scene she’s in, balancing attraction, fragility, and outright menace in a means that makes the movie compulsively watchable. Sydney Sweeney, then again, basically performs a model of Sydney Sweeney: the wide-eyed, resilient younger lady navigating hazard with a mixture of vulnerability and dedication. She’s stable and brings the mandatory relatability to Millie, nevertheless it seems like a task we’ve seen her sort out earlier than—serviceable, but not notably stretching.

I’ve to confess, I by no means say this about thrillers, however the plot was remarkably predictable for me, even with out having learn the e book. From early purple flags and heavy foreshadowing, I just about knew the place issues had been headed earlier than the large mid-film shift. Most of the twists felt telegraphed, which dulled among the suspense. That stated, the story’s inherent absurdity—excessive character actions, gratuitous steamy moments, and over-the-top confrontations—provides to the campy enjoyable if you happen to lean into it.
General, The Housemaid is an pleasant holiday-season distraction: flawed and foreseeable, however carried by Seyfried’s tour-de-force flip and sufficient demented power to make it well worth the trip. If the e book is equally absurd, I can see why it grew to become a BookTok sensation.
- E-mail: neill@outloudculture.com

