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Published 13:02 6 Oct 2021 BST
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Without delving too far into potential spoiler territory, Midnight Mass is not its first two episodes.
Although binge-culture has led us to expect to be entirely hooked by a TV show from the first 10 minutes, this Netflix series is a slower burn, allowing itself time to establish an appropriate atmosphere, a sense of space that's just uncomfortable enough for these horrors to take place.
Had I not been encouraged by friends to "just get to episode three, PLEASE" I may have bowed out long before I was pulled in, but the events that follow don't just make the wait make sense, they make it worth it.
With hidden clues, unnerving passages, and revelations that are as satisfying as they are horrifying, Midnight Mass builds slowly to its second act from which chaos ensues, rules are broken, and this entire world is left to burn.
Creator Flanagan has said that Midnight Mass is his most personal project to date. Raised as a "healthy" Catholic, the director's vision of faith is both confronting and oddly comforting, as the gospel is redefined and the Word of the Lord is reimagined.
While religion is a direct cause of the horrors that befall Crockett Island it can also be relief, a source of much needed solace in the show's final moments, so wrought in agony that you'd do well to get through them without feeling every moment of anguish.
And if a brilliantly told story about belief, faith, and unbridled fear wasn't enough to make you give this series a go, let the cast do it for you. Kate Siegel (The Haunting of Hill House) and Zach Gilford (Friday Night Lights) lead as great an ensemble as this story deserves, but it's Hamish Linklater's performance as the enigmatic Father Paul that truly steals the proverbial show.
With soliloquies so worthy of the chunks of time they take up, and a quiet internal haunting sure to stay with you long after episode seven, Linklater's performance will leave you wishing Father Paul would apply scripture to your life too - and wondering why in the name of the God we haven't seen this guy on TV more.
Midnight Mass isn't your standard Netflix horror bathed in jump scares, ghost sightings, and gore, and nor should it be. The fear is more palpable, the scares more satisfying. It's horror as it should be - unnerving, parasitic, and so good it's really quite believable.
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