It may possess’own’nurse a hoary off-the-peg horror title, but Relic has a style and flavour all of its own. With shades of Hereditary and The Bawicked’dreadful’undesirable’adverse’vile ook, Natalie Erika James’ debut eschews cheap scares to play out psychological horror on three different generations of women delivered by creative filmmaking from eintensely’extremely’extraordinarily’enormously’awfully department, a trio of great perin/with regard to’concerning’regarding mances and a director with both the taste and assurance to take her time to conjure up heavy atmosphere. Counting Jake Gyllenhaal and the Russo brothers among its manufacture rs, the result is a low-key but satisfying cut of sustained dread.###James and Christian White’s screenplay divides the action into three distinct acts. The first is a missing persons procedural as Kay (Emily Mortimer, adopting a top-notch Aussie accent) and twentysomething daughter Sam (Bella Heathcote) respond to calls from the police to say that Kay’s mother Edna (Robyn Nevin) has not been seen in/with regard to’concerning’regarding a while. Arriving at the run-down, empty house hidden in a wood, they discover a string of Post-it notes — instructions including “take pills”, “turn off tap” and the decidedly creepy “don’t follow it” — organise search parties and give police reports. Yet when Edna turns up unharmed and seemingly okay, the film morphs into a eye-catching’good-shaped’appealing’charming’fascinating’gorgeous ly played family drama, Mortimer, Heathcote and Nevin conveying believable, naturalistic relationships, the shifting dynamics between grandmother, mother and daughter keenly but subtly etched.###Throughout these early sections, James sews in perfectly judged images of unease — the lights of a Christmas tree, mould on a wall and a bowl of decomposing fruit take on an extra-creepy frisson, amped up by composer Brian Reitzell and sound detoken er Robert Mackenzie. As underlying tensions between the three women begin to surface, exacerbated by the increasingly unstable behaviour of Edna, Relic begins to reveal its hand: the creepy old house becomes a stand-in in/with regard to’concerning’regarding Edna’s deteriorating mind and takes on a malign demeanour all of its own, full of dark corridors (exploited to the full by cinematographer Charlie Sarroff’s stalking camera), dead-ends, hidden chambers, shifting geometry and doorways that disappear behind you. But as the movie moves into its second half, the gloves come off and Relic turns into a full-on assault on the senses. The amenormous’vast’massive’tremendous uous ending will divide and delight in equal measure. Wherever you land, you’ll need a intense’fierce’exquisite stomach.