The post-pandemic sci-fi thriller follows a family of survivors whose past, memories and secrets are unearthed by an enigmatic stranger.
Glasshouse is set after an airborne dementia known as The Shred has left humanity roaming like lost and dangerous animals, unable to remember who they are. Confined to their airtight glasshouse, a family does what they must to survive – until the sisters are seduced by a stranger who upsets the family’s rituals, unearthing a past they have tried to bury.
Sensual and savage, this post-pandemic love triangle is the feature film directorial debut of Kelsey Egan, who co-wrote the script with associate producer Emma Lungiswa de Wet.

Glasshouse is frequently billed as “The Beguiled for the pandemic era”, but this can be misleading. “By openly courting comparisons to The Beguiled, Glasshouse distracts viewers from realising just how messed up things will get,” warns Comicon.com, calling the film “a folk horror movie that could become a modern classic.”
Glasshouse had its world premiere at North America’s top genre film festival, Fantasia, in Montreal, Canada in August 2021 – and also screened at Fantastic Fest, the largest genre film festival in the USA, earning multiple five-star reviews and a 90% critics’ rating on Rotten Tomatoes.
Film Threat’s Lorry Kitka singled out
Glasshouse as her “favourite film of the year so far”;
Exclaim proclaimed, “Kelsey Egan is a filmmaker to keep an eye on”; and
Pop Culture Planet included British actress
Jessica Alexander (the upcoming live action remake of
The Little Mermaid) in their list of the Best Performances of 2021, in good company alongside the likes of Jennifer Coolidge in
The White Lotus.
The response to Glasshouse’s UK release has been similarly glowing, with four-star reviews in the likes of Total Film and The Guardian, who called it “a sinister, seductive meditation on memory, desire and loss.”
Alexander and breakout star
Anja Taljaard play the sisters, Bee and Evie, opposite Hilton Pelser (the BAFTA-nominated
Moffie, the upcoming remake of
Dangerous Liaisons) as The Stranger.
Glasshouse’s stellar cast also includes film and theatre veteran Adrienne Pearce (the BAFTA-winning
Troy and the Emmy-winning
The Triangle); 13-year-old Naledi Award winner and Fleur du Cap nominee Kitty Harris (
Matilda the Musical); and Brent Vermeulen, who was singled out by
The Hollywood Reporter as “one of this year’s major acting discoveries in Cannes” when
The Harvesters (Die Stropers) screened in Un Certain Regard in 2018.
Pictured: Jessica Alexander who plays Bee.
Pictured: Anja Taljaard who plays Evie.
For Egan, Glasshouse “explores two opposing coping mechanisms to trauma: holding tightly to the past as a form of preservation, and wilful forgetting.”Director of photography Justus de Jager (an Africa Movie Academy Award nominee for Siembamba) shot Glasshouse at The Pearson Conservatory, the last standing Victorian glasshouse in South Africa, marooned in the Eastern Cape since 1881.
De Wet calls the national monument, which she remembers from childhood, “a perfect metaphor for the aesthetic goal of the colonial project. It feels timeless and placeless because that really was the objective – make everywhere into England! It’s a rarified atmosphere that can be contained and controlled, modeled on an idealised, white-washed projection of ‘Home’. But it’s also a fragile construction.”
Alexandra Heller-Nicholas, writing for The Alliance of Women Film Journalists, calls Glasshouse, “A masterclass in how small-scale fantastic allegory and its world-building potential can provide fertile ground with which to examine the stain of colonialism itself … A thrilling reminder of just how powerful fantastic filmmaking is when placed in the hands of filmmakers who truly understand its power.”