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ANIMALS

average rating is 5 out of 5

Critic:

Finn O'Toole

|

Posted on:

Jun 8, 2026

Film Reviews
ANIMALS
Directed by:
Maya Gray
Written by:
Maya Gray
Starring:
Serine Sianosian, Rachel Alig

Following her mother’s passing, Zoya invites a stranger, Amelia, to stay in her family home after an Airbnb mixup. What begins as an innocent-seeming mistake gradually transforms into a hostile takeover. ‘Animals’, by filmmaker Maya Gray, will take audiences on a wild, unpredictable and disturbing ride that will have you hanging on every word.

 

The highlight of the film by far is the excellent central performances. Serine Sianosian brings Zoya to life with a deeply complex performance – limiting her grief and turmoil to subtle micro-expressions. This adds a striking sense of naturalism which ensures viewers’ suspension of disbelief. Rachel Alig, as Amelia, brings an entirely different energy to the piece. At first seeming harmless and naive, Alig crafts a performance that slowly peels back layers over the film’s runtime to eventually reveal a character that is hostile and cunning to the most malevolent extent. The shifting power dynamics between these two characters, who mask so much of their true emotions and intentions, lies emphatically at the heart of the narrative.

 

Despite the spectacle of the central performances, praise should also be given to Gray’s expert direction and understated cinematography by Olugbenga Osikomaiya. The cold colour grading that makes the house feel barren, high visual contrast, tight frames, and cluttered set design all help to provide a palpable feeling of claustrophobia. These things may go unnoticed to the untrained eye, but these choices are essential to the uneasy atmosphere of the piece – whether audiences pick up on it or not.

 

A key reading that one may take away from this story is the very striking parallels to colonialism. This is expressed nowhere better than in the sequence titles throughout the film:

  1. Preparation | This is where Amelia lays her foundations. She uses pity and coercive tactics to convince Zoya to let her stay overnight, before gently pushing boundaries and converging on her personal space by sleeping in her bed – much like colonial incursions where access is gained gradually under the guise of cooperation or necessity.
  2. Persecution | Echoing how colonial powers often frame expansion as benevolent while extracting further concessions, Amelia then manipulates Zoya by performing a “kind” act (making breakfast). At the moment of delivering this “gift”, she then springs the unreasonable question of moving in permanently, leveraging the breakfast against Zoya and portraying her as the unreasonable party.
  3. Hunger | This is where the key mechanism of control comes in, becoming the gatekeeper of Zoya’s sustenance, therefore making herself essential while maintaining all the power in the dynamic.
  4. Execution | Taking the first sign of resistance as an excuse, Amelia then brutalises Zoya and disposes of her – a feature of colonial campaigns throughout history which is even present in current world events.
  5. Denial | The final step; denying anything ever happened and offering trivial compensation, such as naming the new dog after Zoya, to anyone who speaks out about it.

These factors, and the motif of Amelia grotesquely guzzling down water with an unquenchable thirst for more, perfectly portray this theme in a unique and eye opening manner – paralleling procedures used to enter, replace and colonise various cultures throughout history.

 

‘Animals’ is a slowly unravelling farce of power and control. Gray outlines pertinent themes of colonialism on a scale more easily digestible for viewers by localising it in the conflict between two characters, resulting in a visceral drama that doesn’t waste a single beat. With such a high level of artistry on display, I eagerly await what Maya Gray and company decide to create next…

 

Animals is screening at the 2026 Raindance Film Festival.

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Finn O'Toole
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