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2025 • Comedy • 97m

Fackham Hall

"Born to aristocracy. Bred for idiocy."

67

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FRESH

171 critic reviews

69%

POPCORN METER

AUDIENCE

Verified ratings

A new servant embarks on an unlikely relationship with the youngest daughter of a prominent English family. Simultaneously, rivalries are spilling over in the Davenport family, led by the Lord and Lady as they also weather the epic failure of the wedding of their eldest daughter to her caddish cousin.

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Top Cast

Damian Lewis
Damian Lewis
Lord Davenport
Katherine Waterston
Katherine Waterston
Lady Davenport
Thomasin McKenzie
Thomasin McKenzie
Rose
Ben Radcliffe
Ben Radcliffe
Eric
Tom Felton
Tom Felton
Archibald
Emma Laird
Emma Laird
Poppy
Tom Goodman-Hill
Tom Goodman-Hill
Inspector Watt
Ramon Tikaram
Ramon Tikaram
Darvesh Khalid
Tim McMullan
Tim McMullan
Cyril
Anna Maxwell Martin
Anna Maxwell Martin
Mrs McAllister
Sue Johnston
Sue Johnston
Great Aunt Bonaparte
Hayley Mills
Hayley Mills
Rose Davenport (voice)
Adam Woodward
Adam Woodward
Bert Chester
Lily Knight
Lily Knight
Fifi Valentine
Lizzie Hopley
Lizzie Hopley
Phyllis Davenport
Jason Done
Jason Done
JRR Tolkien
Nathan McMullen
Nathan McMullen
Alexander
Karen Henthorn
Karen Henthorn
Sister Jude
Director: Jim O'HanlonProducer: Kris ThykierProducer: Danny PerkinsExecutive Producer: Andrew KarpenProducer: Jimmy CarrWriter: Jimmy CarrWriter: Patrick CarrWriter: Steve Dawson

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Reviews

CinemaSerf
2025-12-16
60%

When the orphaned “Eric” (Ben Radcliffe) is sent by his nuns to deliver a message to “Lord Davenport” (Damian Lewis) at his stately pile, he is barely through the door before he is mistaken for a job applicant and employed as a hall-boy. He’s quite a savvy young man who can think on his feet, so before too long he is heading up the hierarchy behind the green baize door and even flirting with the daughter of the house. Now he’d already had a bit of an altercation with “Rose” (Thomasin McKenzie) on his way up the drive on arrival, so she’s feeling a little guilty and she’s also quite taken by the glint in his eye. Daddy, though, needs her to marry the wealthy “Archie” (Tom Felton) else they whole family could be turfed out on their ear - and boy, are they unequipped for that! The determined “Rose”, though, is having none of that arranged marriage malarkey and the pair even plan to elope before - yep, you’ve guessed it, there’s a body found and so curly moustachioed police inspector “Watt” (Tom Woodman-Hill) is sent to investigate this most curious of crimes. With no absence of suspects or motive, the policeman naturally alights on the handsome but poverty stricken young stranger who hopes to marry into into the family. Surely it cannot be him? Though this does have it’s moments, it reminded me too much of Dawn French’s far superior “Murder Most Horrid” (1991) with some additional bits from "Downton Abbey” and a “Knives Out” mystery thrown in for good measure. It takes a pop at the vagaries of rustic England and it’s landed gentry, their attitudes and pursuits but hardly originally and the likes of Sue Johnston (doing her best Dame Maggie Smith), Anna Maxwell Martin (think Phyllis Logan does “Supergran”) and the underused Hayley Mills don’t really have enough to work with to make anything like enough impact on a plot that does have one thing very much in common with Agatha Christie. It’s denouement comes from left field and answers questions we didn’t know to ask about people we didn't even know were in the cauldron. It’s not really a whodunnit that we can join in with, so we watch in hope that the humour will do more of the entertaining, and for me a vicar in a pulpit misreading bible verse in a sort of “phnaa phnaa” bishop and choir boy fashion just wasn’t enough. Lewis looks like he is trying to enjoy himself, but even he seems a bit bemused as to why this is funny as it began to fall away and the puerility started to take over. Of course it’s meant to be a satire, maybe even a satire of a satire, but I just didn’t really find it funny, sorry.

C
Chandler Danier
2025-12-31
70%

I wouldn't have watched this but the name. It's better than Meet the Fockers. I didn't watch that because I thought the name was stupid. This is subtle. I watched it. After, I spent a few moments figuring out if this was released by the same company that did the Naked Gun remake. But maybe it's like Tornado or that twin film of Dante's Peak. This is funnier. At least two funny things: I struggle to define walls, too. He was just a child It does drag but I got dragged back from my phone a few times to laugh. I did get a little high. Used the choke of my pipe as a roach clip, actually. Pretty proud of that.

P
PeaceMeal
2026-03-29
70%

A refreshingly great comedy with hints from Monty Python and Benny Hill. It's simple humor. I smiled and laughed throughout the first 1/2 of the movie. My interest was kept up until about 3/4 of the movie but it then became obvious how the script would end. I hoped for some unpredictable humor. A light british comedy that is almost contnuously entertaining and so easy to watch. RATING: 7.5/10

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Details

Status
Released
Origin
US
Languages
English
Studios
Mews Films, Elysian Film Group, Two & Two Pictures, Vacancy Films, Anonymous Content
Website
https://bleeckerstreetmedia.com/fackham-hall

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