The Ugly Stepsister (2025) is Norwegian writer and director Emilie Blichfeldt’s debut feature that combines a reworked fairytale with stomach-churning body horror while satirising the appalling steps women must take when gaining a wealthy husband is the highest aspiration a woman could have.
This Cinderella tale is shown from the point of view of Elvira (Lea Myren), who, along with her younger sister Alma (Flo Fagerli) and their mother Rebekka (Ane Dahl Torp) move into their new Stepfather’s stately home, along with his only daughter Agnes (Thea Sofie Loch Naess). Following the untimely death of the patriarch, the female quartet discovers they are penniless, and attentions turn to marrying royalty, via the Royal Ball at the nearby Castle. So far, so fairytale-tastic.

Not only does the film play with expectations by introducing the titular Stepsister to a world of medieval facial surgery and very questionable dietary suggestions, to become beautiful and entice the young Prince, but the stereotyped idea of rose tinted love is further distorted by Cinderella’s affections being fulfilled by someone inferior to her social standing. Elvira, being the one besotted with the Prince next door, believes herself to be experiencing true love, the likes of which fill the book of poetry from which she yearningly reads.
Elvira’s journey is not only physically torturous, but it also sees her initial wide-eyed naivete gradually eroded by both the barbaric beautification at the behest of her mother and by her slow realisation that more carnal elements underplay romantic interactions. Unlike the fairytale source material, the other stepsister is not involved in the hunt for the Prince as she’s believed to be too young, something which she wisely maintains to avoid the madness she witnesses unfolding with her sister.

Reminiscent of The Substance (2024) in its unflinchingly grotesque portrayal of a women buckling under the pressures the patriarchy has foisted upon them, The Ugly Stepsister is brilliantly shot combining the hazy candle lit interiors of a fantasised period piece with garish 80’s inspired dream sequences where almost neon pastels blur around the edges as though shot through a Vaseline smeared lens. The score combines period-appropriate harps and choral vocalising with retro synths, which continue to prop up the aesthetic from fairytale lethargy with hints of teenage pop sensibilities. Rolling timpani drums heighten the ensuing madness with recollection of Kubrick’s The Shining (1980), while the adolescent courtly exploits of such an overly romanticised era bring Bridgeton (2020) to mind.
However, the body horror will stick in the audience’s mind, as The Ugly Stepsister maintains a stilted absurdity that adds a much-needed comical sense to the exaggerated grotesquerie on show. The film begins with an amusingly awkward death, a rotting corpse, and then the popping of pimples before taking gradually larger steps into the arena of the painfully bilious, climaxing in an almost Exorcistic expulsion of one’s stomach contents. The scenes within the surgeon’s chair brought memories of the Gillian-esque medical practices in Brazil (1985) and Twelve Monkeys (1995), and the threat of ocular trauma would make Fulci squirm. The leering physical mutilation has its edges rounded off by the fairytale hyper realism of the film’s setting, where the blood and torture are exaggerated beyond concerns of sadism.

The Ugly Stepsister‘s sets and wardrobe are all garishly opulent and keep the audience well within the Brothers Grimm world, while the scenes shift from the absurd to the sublime with characters framed by blossoming flowers and pitch blackness, with all the classical drama of a Caravaggio masterpiece. The film’s star, Lea Myren, plays Elvira brilliantly, often silently conveying her journey from wide-eyed naive innocence to physical and mental derangement, lost to an obsession orchestrated by a sadistically warped mother and a misogynistic society.

More Film Reviews
Being one of the most attributed inspirations in filmmaking, filmmakers around the world have cited The Evil Dead series as a motivation to create cinema for themselves. The mastery of… The Rage Part II is a 2023 British zombie horror, written and directed by Joshua Cleave. After studying film and television production at Leeds Metropolitan University, Joshua went on to… Despite being one of Japan’s biggest film studios throughout the late 40s and 50s during the golden age of Japanese cinema, Daiei was struggling by the mid-60s and had to… Blast 2021, or Deflagrations in its cooler sounding, original French title, is a tense thriller focusing on a small company that disarms landmines around the world. After a recent successful… With the turn of a new decade, new opportunities were sought by film studio Daiei. In 1970, Daiei on the verge of bankruptcy, entered into a partnership with fellow struggling… Caged Heat is a 1974 American women-in-prison exploitation film, written and directed by Jonathan Demme and released under Roger Corman’s New World Pictures. Though the film would be his directorial…Bloody Muscle Bodybuilder in Hell (2012) Film Review – A Rush Of Blood To The Dead
The Rage Part II (2023) Film Review – All The Rage (Unnamed Footage Festival 666)
Secrets of a Woman’s Prison (1968) Film Review – The Origin of Japanese Women-in-Prison Cinema
Blast (2021) Film Review – An Explosive French Thriller
Island of Horrors (1970) Film Review – Surviving Decapitation Island
Caged Heat (1974) Film review – I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings
