IN his Oscar-winning horror Get Out, writer-director Jordan Peele took a magnifying glass to race relations and exposed ugly blemishes in the face of present-day American society.

For his eagerly awaited second feature, the filmmaker holds up a mirror – literally and figuratively – and asks us to stare unblinking into the eyes of our distorted reflections.

Us is more bloodthirsty than its predecessor, obliquely referencing The Shining and Invasion Of The Body Snatchers as a family of four are held hostage by diabolical doppelgangers. And it is open to multiple interpretations, which should spark lively debate over the popcorn. You can read this as an allegory about the oppression of an economic and political underclass, the fear of outsiders or the war against terrorism.

Viewed purely as a misfit member of the horror genre, Peele’s picture is unsettling rather than white-knuckle terrifying and there are no conventional jump scares.

In 1986, when she was a little girl with pigtails, Adelaide Wilson (Lupita Nyong’o) sees something unspeakable at the Shaman’s Vision Quest attraction at Santa Cruz amusement park during a thunderous downpour.

Fast-forward to the present and Adelaide is a fiercely protective mother to two children, Zora (Shahadi Wright Joseph) and Jason (Evan Alex).

She travels with husband Gabe (Winston Duke) and the kids to the family’s beach house to reconnect with friends Josh and Kitty Tyler (Tim Heidecker, Elisabeth Moss) and their twin daughters (Cali and Noelle Sheldon). Late one night, Jason interrupts his mother with disturbing news: “There’s a family in our driveway.”

Gabe attempts to scare away the four shadowy figures but his threats are hollow because the intruders are the Wilsons’ gnarled, scissor-wielding doppelgangers, Red (Nyong’o), Abraham (Duke), Umbrae (Wright Joseph) and Pluto (Alex). Us is a stylish home invasion thriller, which lacks the persistent itch of Get Out after the end credits roll.

Nyong’o delivers tour-de-force performances that could earn her an Oscar nomination next year while Duke provides fleeting comic relief.

Composer Michael Abels appropriates the melody of hip hop duo Luniz’s summer anthem I Got 5 On It as the discordant theme of his soundtrack, which underscores each twist in a tangled narrative.

Seeing is deceiving.

RATING: 7/10

DAMON SMITH