Eliza Scanlen, Edvin Ryding, and Charlie Rowe star in the psychological drama 'Let It Come Down', directed by Norwegian filmmaker Anna Fredrikke Bjerke. The film follows a couple's weekend getaway to restore a family home, which takes an unexpected turn when an unforeseen visitor arrives, testing their desires and leading to fatal consequences. Reinvent Yellow is handling world sales and will launch the project at the upcoming European Film Market. The supporting cast includes Sam Hazeldine, Lisa Loven Kongsli, Jude Bain, Jacob Ferguson, and Eilidh McKerracher. The film's producers are Kami Naghdi of Constance Media and Isabella Speaight and Molly Murphy of Backscatter Productions. Fremantle alum Nastasja Borgeot is a co-producer through her new production outfit Average Plus Productions. Exec producers are Dinara Kulibayeva and Alexandre Montavon. Casting was by Hannah Marie Williams and Kristina Erderly, with Lorenzo Levrini as the DoP and Andy Harris as the production designer. The film was shot in Scotland in October 2025 and was selected for the Nordic Co-Production Market at New Nordic Films in Haugesund. Bjerke, a Norwegian writer-director based in London, has had her shorts screened at BAFTA and Oscar-qualifying festivals, earning a Vimeo Staff Pick and a Vimeo Best of the Year award. She is an alum of Abi Morgan’s Little Chick Writers’ Retreat and Directors UK’s Inspire talent development programme. 'Let It Come Down' also marks the feature debuts of Speaight and Murphy of Backscatter Productions, who have worked on short-form projects like the postpartum thriller 'Wild Animal' and the surrealist dark comedy 'Pigs'. Naghdi’s credits include 'Rescue Dawn', written and directed by Werner Herzog, and 'Incendiary', starring Michelle Williams, Ewan McGregor, and Matthew Macfadyen. Bjerke expressed her gratitude for working with the leading cast, praising their vulnerability, openness, generosity, and reverence for their characters. Speaight and Murphy added their pride in collaborating with Bjerke and the team, highlighting the emotional precision and balance between tenderness and danger in the script.