Interesting early film by Tony Scott, younger brother of Ridley and a Brit who went on to big-time Hollywood success with films like 'Top Gun'.
Here the emphasis is on beautiful, rich, black-and-white cinematography in a creepy tale that could easily have been a television drama, as in the old 'Play for Today' mould.
The North Yorkshire setting is the real star, though Rosamund Greenwood's performance runs it a close second.
The film is in a kind of rural northern Gothic genre. I wouldn't be surprised if the League of Gentlemen writers and actors were to admit to being influenced by this portrait of sinister goings on in a land that time forgot.
The slow pace, and the details of the life of the brother and sister, keep the narrative on the right side parody, but not by much.
It's a million miles away from 'Top Gun', but the camera-work shows that Tony Scott was a major talent.