Critics and viewers alike appreciate the "old-fashioned thrills" and Gatiss's loyalty to the source material.
At only 30 minutes, the film uses every second to build what critics at The Guardian call a "glittering half-hour nugget" of horror.
The central horror is purely visual. Reviewers from The Independent highlight how disturbing it is to see a static object literally "come to life". The Mezzotint felirat Angol
“I thought this was genuinely chilling... Great performance from Kinnear.” letterboxd.com
Watch Mark Gatiss discuss the creation and 'bleak atmosphere' of this adaptation: The Mezzotint (2021) with Mark Gatiss Evolution Of Horror YouTube• Dec 23, 2021 Why It Works Reviewers from The Independent highlight how disturbing it
Gatiss weaves in dry, academic wit—particularly about Victorian golf and museum bureaucracy—which makes the eventual supernatural intrusion feel even more jarring. Perspectives from the Community
The story follows Edward Williams (played with "understated" excellence by ), a university museum curator who receives a mysterious, nondescript engraving—a mezzotint—of an English country house. What starts as a boring acquisition soon becomes a nightmare: every time Williams looks at the picture, the scene has changed. A moon appears; a window opens; a skeletal figure begins to crawl across the lawn. Perspectives from the Community The story follows Edward
“You'll be in thrall to Mark Gatiss's smart, snappy and utterly hammy ghost story within seconds.” www.theguardian.com