The Strays

2023 - 2 - 23

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Image courtesy of "Digital Mafia Talkies"

'The Strays' Ending, Explained: What Was Carl And Dione's Plan ... (Digital Mafia Talkies)

Written and directed by Nathaniel Martello-White, "The Strays" tells the story of a woman whose sensibilities were so absurd and erratic that even her ...

That’s when Ian, Mary, and Sebastian discovered that Neve was just an alias Cheryl had used to hide her tracks and that she had offered her own children money to leave her and return to where they had come from. She was a disgrace and Carl knew that she was only apologizing so that she could make them go away and then return to her perfect and posh life. We believe there was absolutely nothing wrong with her ex-husband Michael, and she was only making all of it up to make her family sympathetic towards her situation. Cheryl told them that Michael, to whom she was married, was a bad man, and he had forced her to have a second baby. Cheryl was an extremely racist person who thought that people of color polluted her environment and that the two worlds should never mix. Cheryl had offered a whooping sum to Carl and Dione, and she believed that she could win them over and make them go back to London. Cheryl wanted to handle the situation and do some damage control, but contrary to that, she went and did something that worsened the situation. There was an air of mystery around her intentions, but it still couldn’t be perceived to what extent she was ready to go to get to that aspirational financial and social status. Cheryl completely revamped her identity and took the alias “Neve.” She married a white man named Ian and had two children named Sebastian and Mary. Cheryl had a literal panic attack, and her sister on the other end of the phone was constantly telling her to breathe and calm down for a moment. On the face of it, she was the most polite and well-mannered person one could ever meet, but hidden underneath that exterior was a racist and treacherous person who could betray even those people who meant the world to her. We come to know that Cheryl had a problem with the way society treated them, and through their condescending behavior, thought of them as no more than reprobates.

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Image courtesy of "The Indian Express"

The Strays movie review: Netflix's new horror movie is unsettling, but ... (The Indian Express)

Ashley Madekwe in a still from The Strays. A suburban horror that offers a salacious peek into the secretive lives of the almost-wealthy, a social thriller that ...

In fact, presenting them — the only two overtly Black characters in sight — as the violent ‘villains’, especially when the movie itself wants us to believe that they’re the ones who’ve been wronged, is dicey optics at best, and self-defeating at worst. It is suggested, strongly, that Neve has never really been able to connect with her children, seeing in their mixed-race appearances hints of the past that she has worked so hard to bury. Neve’s husband recoils in shock at the sight of her pummelling their son, which is when he begins to recognise that something is seriously wrong with her. But things begin to spiral out of control when two strangers begin showing up at random times in Neve’s life, and begin to methodically pull at the seams of her perfectly crafted fake existence. She refuses to take it off even at home, as if her Blackness is a crime waiting to be discovered. Presumably presented with several options — she could have chosen to become anybody, really — she decided to transform herself into a sort of person that society had conditioned her into believing is superior.

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Image courtesy of "cosmopolitan.com"

Netflix's The Strays ending explained (cosmopolitan.com)

We see Neve explain to her new family why she had to leave the children behind when she fled from their abusive father. the ending of the strays on netflix ...

With a piece like this, you can kind of look at it and think: 'Okay, how can we enhance this?' and I think showing a bit of the backstory is one of those things," she explained. We then jump forward a number of years to find Cheryl – now going by the name Neve – and living a completely different life. In what soon becomes an incredibly tense situation, Carl and Dione insist on celebrating Dione’s birthday with the whole extended family by playing a board game and ordering a Chinese takeaway. Her oldest daughter assumes that Neve will let them stay with her new new family, however, their mother attempts to make things right by giving her two oldest children – Carl and Dione – £20,000. [Netflix](https://www.cosmopolitan.com/uk/entertainment/g12450465/netflix-best-new-films-tv-shows-documentaries/) and it has quite the ending! The movie begins with Cheryl – played by Ashley Madekwe – who is living a rather miserable life in London, packing up and deciding to leave her life behind.

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Image courtesy of "OTTplay"

The Strays review: Netflix's intriguing social thriller fails to take off (OTTplay)

A Black woman (Ashley Madekwe) experiences difficulty in THE STRAYS as a result of institutionalised racism and marginalisation. She departs from there in ...

The Strays starts off promising but ends up heading in a really bizarre, trivial way. The film takes great pleasure in making you feel disoriented and completely absorbed as a result of the storyline changes. The suspense in the film increases to nearly unbearable levels when everyone is gathered together for the astounding climax. Before we have time to process the section's dramatic revelation, the movie shifts to a more coming-of-age vibe in the second half. In the opening scene of "Neve," Neve is stalked by beings that are just out of sight, but are they actually there? Neve (Ashley Madekwe), the mother in the Netflix movie "The Strays," appears to be leading a charmed life in the suburbs with her husband and two kids.

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Image courtesy of "Bloody Disgusting"

'The Strays' Review – Netflix's Social Thriller Feels Like an ... (Bloody Disgusting)

Nathaniel Martello-White's feature debut The Strays is a social thriller that lacks bite, discipline, and a third act. When the film abruptly ended, I.

The Strays might come from a place of impossible angst about everything from assimilation to self-hatred, but concludes with all the grace of an Irish exit on St. Neve’s behavioral commentary on “passing,” class mobility, and serving yourself over others provides a situation ripe for social investigation, but Martello-White’s third act tosses kerosene on expanding themes and dares the audience to figure it all out. A film built on obvious secrets divides itself into three acts, the first two of which — one about “Current Neve,” the second about Marvin and Abigail — are expositional to a sluggish fault. The introduction of Marvin (Jorden Myrie) and Abigail (Bukky Bakray) is so emotionally weighted, only to abandon character development in favor of a third-act horror bend. Martello-White toys with haunted visions and break-in foreshadowing with minimal degrees of intensity in an attempt to hone on Neve’s house of cards tumbling down at the slightest gust. Ashley Madekwe leads as a complicated housewife everyone knows as Neve, a light-skinned Black woman who embraces wigs, makeup applications, and the comforts of white suburbia.

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Image courtesy of "Netflix Life"

What is The Strays about on Netflix? (The Strays plot and more) (Netflix Life)

The Strays starring Ashley Madekwe is now streaming on Netflix. What is the Netflix thriller film about? We shared the synopsis and more here.

Given what the movie is about, this maturity rating seems appropriate. Cheryl/Neve has worked hard to hide her background and strives to live a picture-perfect life. Initially, the story is set in the year of 2003. He made his feature film debut with this movie and wrote the screenplay. So, she decides to run away from her problems to seek a better life. Also, if you enjoy movies like Get Out and Us, this film will be right up your alley as well.

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Image courtesy of "Ready Steady Cut"

The Strays Ending Explained - who are Abigail and Marvin? (Ready Steady Cut)

We discuss the ending of the 2023 Netflix film The Strays, which will contain significant spoilers and plot points.

And the ending shows she never cared for Sebastian and Mary any more than she did for Marvin and Abigail when she first walked out on them. Yet, Marvin takes the check and thanks her for it, giving Neve a false sense of security as she now thinks her troubles are over and she can return to her real family. After the gala spectacle, Neve asks to meet with Abigail and Marvin, where she briefly apologizes for abandoning them before giving them a check for £20,000 to help them “get back on their feet” and, of course, go back to London. Throughout the runtime, Neve treats her two children with Ian as extensions of the perfectly posh life she’s built. The movie ends with the four siblings looking out the window as their mother abandons them. Neve then walks out the door without looking back, mirroring the film’s first scene when she leaves her previous life. Upon entering the home, Abigail runs a bath while her brother puts on a fancy bathrobe he got from their hotel and turns the telly on. When Marvin returns to the living room and realizes she’s gone, it’s too late. [The Strays](https://readysteadycut.com/2023/02/23/the-strays-review/) opens with the protagonist, Cheryl (played by [Ashley Madekwe](https://readysteadycut.com/person/Ashley-Madekwe/)), venting to her sister about her financial struggles. Neve’s paranoia over these two people grows to terrifying levels – she sees them everywhere, thinks they’re out to get her, and has bizarre, even violent outbursts in front of her husband, children, and friends. Everything about Neve, apart from her skin color, screams upper-class white woman – her accent, the car she drives, the perfectly manicured wigs she wears, and even the gala she puts together to raise money for “unfortunate individuals” in Africa. It’s clear how hard she works to belong when we see her practicing her accent in the mirror.

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Image courtesy of "Looper"

The Ending Of The Strays Explained - Looper (Looper)

At a glance, "The Strays" may give viewers strong "Get Out" vibes. After all, both are psychological horror movies that begin with a Black character in a suburb ...

Audiences hear the revving of the delivery guy's motorcycle, and judging by the faces of the other characters, Neve has hitched a ride with the Uber guy and fled. She even tries to draw attention away from the cries of pain from her husband, whom Carl is torturing in the gym as she speaks. At a glance, Carl seems to be the villain of the story. The two walk in like they own the place and begin acting out the charade of a happy family, threatening Neve and her family to play along. One of the most jarring images in the entire movie is what Dione chooses to wear during the break-in: a silver party hat. In this respect, she takes after her mother — she would rather live a lie than face the truth. In a sense, their staged family gathering is no more real than the illusion that Neve was living in suburbia before Carl and Dione showed up. For Dione, the break-in is a chance to become a kid again, even though she knows that it's only pretend. Yet Neve is blind to how they feel, because she assumes that her children are like her and care only about money and social standing. For a while, Dione seems to cling to the hope that her mom will welcome her with open arms. Not once has Neve reached out to her children, nor has she told her new family about her former life. The ending of "The Strays" may be difficult to wrap your mind around.

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Image courtesy of "BBC News"

Netflix film The Strays filmed in 'other-worldly' Lavenham (BBC News)

A picturesque village was chosen for the filming of a psychological horror movie because of its "other-worldly look", according to a film agency.

Mr Horsfield said there was "a fantastic range of beautiful villages in Suffolk" and Lavenham was chosen due to its "other-worldly look". Lavenham is one of two Suffolk villages transformed into an English suburb for Netflix film The Strays. A picturesque village was chosen for the filming of a psychological horror movie because of its "other-worldly look", according to a film agency.

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Image courtesy of "Polygon"

The Strays review: Netflix fumbles a new try at Get Out (Polygon)

First-time writer-director Nathaniel Martello-White tries for a racial-tension thriller in the vein of His House, Master, or Jordan Peele's Us, but until ...

He builds the story around the question of why and how someone would remake their life in a different image, and what it costs to do so. Martello-White seems to want The Strays to be a film about the fault lines in British Black identity, and in class divisions, too. The effect the characters do have is entirely down to the performers: Jorden Myrie as the young man, and Bukky Bakray as the woman. If anything, it hews even closer to Get Out, as it drops the supernatural allegory and horror imagery in favor of something more psychologically real, more disturbingly close to the surface of society. [brilliant, successful movie](https://www.polygon.com/2017/2/28/14762250/get-out-key-peele) that left a comet-like tail blazing across the art and business of film. Back in 2020, Netflix produced Remi Weekes’ [His House](https://www.polygon.com/2020/10/30/21542815/his-house-review-netflix-horror-movie), one of the best British horror films of recent years, a chilling haunted-house movie that explores, with great specificity, the experience of Sudanese asylum-seekers clinging to the precarious, crumbling foothold they’ve been offered in British life.

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