'The Terence Davies Trilogy' review by Brian • Letterboxd
The is widely regarded as a raw, uncompromising exploration of Catholic guilt, queer identity, and the weight of memory . It consists of three short films— Children (1976), Madonna and Child (1980), and Death and Transfiguration (1983)—that follow the fictionalized life of Robert Tucker, a stand-in for Davies himself. A Cinematic "Long, Barely Repressed Sob"
: The trilogy depicts a life of solitude, ending with a "harrowing and mysterious" deathbed sequence in Death and Transfiguration . This final part imagines a transfiguration into white light, leaving it ambiguous whether the character finds peace or merely passes into a void. Evolution of a Visual Master