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Oscar-winning psychological drama with near-perfect Rotten Tomatoes score joins Netflix-Laura Harman-Entertainment – Metro

The film is available to stream now.

Oscar-winning psychological drama with near-perfect Rotten Tomatoes score joins Netflix-Laura Harman-Entertainment – Metro

(Credits: Caitlin Cronenberg/Element/No Trace Camping/Kobal/REX/Shutterstock)

Netflix has just acquired an Oscar-winning psychological drama which has a 93% rating on Rotten Tomatoes.

Released in January 2016, Room is a heart-wrenching thriller starring Brie Larson and Jacob Tremblay as mother and son.

The film was adapted from the widely successful Emma Donoghue novel of the same name, released in 2010.

The film focuses on a mother and son’s introduction to the world after being held captive for seven years after ‘Ma’ (Larson) was kidnapped at age seventeen and kept as a prisoner in a squalid shed they called ‘room’.

The film is a psychological drama that focuses on the changed family dynamics as ‘Ma’ manages her own mental struggles while also mothering her son, Jack (Tremblay) who she gave birth to while being held captive by ‘Old Nick’, her rapist and captor.

The film is heartbreaking and moving and has been met with huge critical acclaim since its release – and as of August 1, it’s now available to stream on Netflix.

The film focuses on a young woman held captive for seven years (Picture: Caitlin Cronenberg/Element/No Trace Camping/Kobal/REX/Shutterstock)

The 1hr 57-minute long film has a 93% audience score and rating on Rotten Tomatoes.

The critic’s consensus on the site reads: ‘Led by incredible work from Brie Larson and Jacob Tremblay, Room makes for an unforgettably harrowing – and undeniably rewarding – experience.’

Mark Kermode said for The Guardian: ‘Brie Larson and seven-year-old Jacob Tremblay are nothing short of perfect as the central couple around whom this trembling universe revolves.’

Lenny Abrahamson wrote for the New York Times: ‘ It turns out that telling this kind of grim story through the eyes of a child isn’t just a shrewdly palatable device, it’s also artistically liberating, because the more the world opens up, the smaller Room becomes.’

The film also stars Joan Allen and William H. Macy as Joy’s parents, both actors also received critical acclaim for these roles but it was Larson who cinched an Oscar win.

Larson won the Oscar for Best Actress at age 25 for her role in this film. The film was also nominated for Best Picture, Best Director, and Best Adapted Screenplay.

Brie won an Academy Award for her performance (Picture: Christopher Polk/Getty Images)

Larson told Metro.co.uk in an interview at the time that the beginning of the film is meant to be a ‘hard part to watch’.

‘The set-up was meant to be the hard part to watch because we want you to root for the characters. You can experience that. What I hope is that people can experience that as well and hear about it. It’s important to feel that sweep,’ she said.

She also revealed she spent a lot of time on the set, examining the space in detail with Tremblay, so they really felt familiar with the space.

The duo both gave strong performances (Picture: Caitlin Cronenberg/Element/No Trace Camping/Kobal/REX/Shutterstock)

‘We spent so much time thinking about the different factors involved in the movie. What did the space of Room look like, and down to the little bits of mould on the tiles,’ she explained.

‘Starting with that we had a great launching pad for the rest of the story. That way we could experience the movie as we were filming it. We didn’t have to spend so much time trying to anticipate how it should be.

‘That’s what made the film seem so honest and simple. We didn’t have to try and make a moment, it felt like we lived it.’

Room is available to stream on Netflix now.

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