To the uninitiated, Maciver’s latest exercise in aggressive stillness will be dismissed as a tedious, rain-slicked trudge through Gloucestershire. But for those of us willing to endure the punishing, un-cut 14-minute opening tracking shot of a damp limestone wall, Curse of the Cotswolds reveals itself as a devastatingly quiet autopsy of post-rural ennui.
Maciver brilliantly subverts the pedestrian tropes of folk-horror, opting instead for what I can only describe as architectural dread. The real antagonist here isn't a specter or a pagan cult, but the oppressive, honey-colored syntax of the Chipping Campden vernacular. The film’s true currency is silence—specifically, the negative space between a retired philologist’s sighs.
The sound design is a masterclass in acoustic violence: the agonizingly crisp crunch of artisanal sourdough, the wet, existential slap of a Barbour jacket against an overgrown hedgerow. Maciver forces the viewer to confront their own complicity in the commodification of the English countryside.
It is a deeply hostile piece of cinema. It is entirely unwatchable. It is an absolute triumph.