Indie Focus: Candy-colored revenge in âPromising Young Womanâ
Hello! Iâm Mark Olsen. Welcome to another edition of your regular field guide to a world of Only Good Movies.
Only good movies
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Welcome to a special pre-holiday edition to jump-start your viewing lists. This newsletter will be taking next week off, so weâll meet again in the new year.
This is a very unusual awards season, given its oddly elongated calendar, but accolades are being handed out nonetheless. This past weekend the Los Angeles Film Critics Association (of which Iâm a member) voted on its 2020 awards, sticking to the actual calendar year rather than the extended eligibility calendar of the Oscars.
Glenn Whipp and Justin Chang wrote about the results, which recognized Steve McQueenâs âSmall Axeâ anthology as best picture and ChloĂŠ Zhao as best director for âNomadland.â Chadwick Boseman was named best actor for âMa Raineyâs Black Bottomâ and Carey Mulligan best actress for âPromising Young Woman.â
As Glenn said of the results, âWith something as magnificent as âSmall Axe,â labeling these movies âfilmâ or âtelevisionâ is irrelevant, particularly in a year when weâve been forced to watch practically everything from inside our homes. Awarding the âSmall Axeâ series as our âbest pictureâ was probably the most 2020 thing we could do.â
And this week on âThe Envelopeâ podcast, I spoke to Rashida Jones about starring in Sofia Coppolaâs âOn the Rocks,â which draws from their experiences growing up with very famous fathers. (Get our Envelope newsletter for highlights when each episode drops, plus awards season news.)
âThere was a kind of a natural synergy there in terms of I relate to a lot of father-daughter stuff and mom-of-young-child stuff,â said Jones, âand getting to a certain point in your life where youâve had all these really big dreams and all this determination to get you to this moment.
âAnd then you look around, youâre sort of like, what is my relationship to all these things that I built in my life, whether itâs my career, my marriage or my family or my relationship with my parents or whatever it is. Like, how do I fit into all this? Am I just relational? Basically, that stuff was very personal to me.â
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âPromising Young Womanâ
Written and directed by Emerald Fennell, whoâs making her feature filmmaking debut, âPromising Young Womanâ has been one of the most highly anticipated films of the year since its debut at Januaryâs Sundance Film Festival. Carey Mulligan gives a searing performance as a woman in an emotional freefall looking to have her revenge on men who wronged her, her friend and, preemptively, others. Released by Focus Features, the film is in limited theatrical release on Friday and will be on VOD in a few weeks.
I spoke to Fennell, Mulligan and Burnham about the movie, its candy-gloss aesthetics and its mess of contradictions.
âI like films that leave you wondering and donât tie things up in bows and donât answer things for you,â Mulligan told me. âI donât like the easy answers and I think Emerald has given the audience so much credit. ⌠And the fact that it doesnât all get wrapped up in a nice ribbon so you can all walk away and forget about it, I think is so much a part of it. Itâs impossible to dismiss. You canât not think about it afterwards.â
In his review for The Times, Justin Chang wrote, ââPromising Young Womanâ plays hard with your empathy and your schadenfreude, as if to suggest that the two reactions, far from being opposed, are in fact closely bound. Certainly they are for Cassie, a bundle of contradictions just about held together by Mulliganâs fastidiously controlled performance, without which this movieâs dark, unruly pleasures might have verged on incoherence. She pushes this determinedly unstable movie about as far as it could possibly go, even if that ultimately isnât far enough. The grimly multitasking finale of âPromising Young Womanâ feels both audacious and uncertain of itself, as Fennell tries to meld a cackle of delight and a blast of fury, with a lingering residue of anguish. It doesnât all come together, though thereâs an undeniable thrill in seeing it come apart.â
For the Tribune News Service, Katie Walsh wrote, âFennellâs ultra-modern fable is wildly unpredictable but all too recognizable. Like her heroine, âPromising Young Womanâ is seductive, bruising and utterly intoxicating. ⌠Fennellâs film isnât all that gory, but it has the attitude and tone of a horror movie, rendered in cupcake colors. Cassie utilizes her ultra-feminine presentation of long blonde locks, florals and garish makeup as armor, a disguise, and as a weapon in her war. Itâs a reflection of the filmâs internal logic that nothing is what it seems; the script is built on constant reveals that walk the viewer down one path before ripping the rug out.â
For the Washington Post, Ann Hornaday wrote, âAloft on pastel clouds of pinks, blues and lavenders, Cassie floats through a world where names like Harvey Weinstein, Brett Kavanaugh and Brock Turner arenât explicitly invoked, but in which a familiar mixture of impunity and self-righteous claims of offended innocence clog the air like so much Axe body spray. Keeping her own counsel, Cassie goes about her agenda with the single-mindedness of the A-student she once was, her catlike face the picture of serene self-possession while a toxic caramel macchiato of grief, rage and vengeance roil underneath. ⌠Say this much for Fennell: She is incapable of pulling punches. Even when theyâre swaddled in the puffiest, fuzziest of gloves, her blows land with gut-wrenching force.â
âSylvieâs Loveâ
Written and directed by Eugene Ashe, âSylvieâs Loveâ is a romantic drama in the lush style of a classic Hollywood movie. Sylvie (Tessa Thompson) meets Robert (Nnamdi Asomugha), and the two are immediately drawn to each other. He is pursuing a career as a jazz saxophonist, and she has ambitions of her own, as the complications of life continually keep them apart. The movie is streaming on Amazon Prime Video.
I spoke to Ashe, Thompson and Asomugha, as well as costume designer Phoenix Mello and production designer Mayne Berke, for a story about crafting the look of the film; it will be published soon.
For The Times, Carlos Aguilar wrote, âFor all its aesthetic qualities, whatâs most remarkable about âSylvieâs Loveâ is that the conflicts in the lives of the Black people it depicts revolve almost exclusively around their personal desires, their pursuit of happiness and their grappling with heartbreak. And though that might be a well-trodden road, the films most referenced as great examples of the form come from a white point of view. ⌠Sweeping and flawlessly produced, Asheâs epic works as an inherently refreshing entry in the canon of a genre designed to make us sigh with knowing elation or tear up in misery thinking about our own bygone rendezvous.â
For the New York Times, Manohla Dargis wrote, ââSylvieâs Loveâ does a largely convincing job re-creating a 1950s Hollywood melodrama, if not in all its particulars than certainly in its emphasis on passionate emotions and feelings. ⌠Asheâs most radical move is how he marshals classic melodrama to tell a story of Black love that would never have been told in old Hollywood. (Todayâs commercial mainstream has pretty much given up on pure romance, alas.) Particularly instructive is his insistent focus on the inner lives of his characters, on what Sylvie and Robert long for, and dream of, as human beings, rather than as emblems of race or avatars of ideals.â
For Remezcla, Monica Castillo wrote, âIn conversations about on-screen representation, historical period movies have been a blind spot. Many filmmakers and fans of these movies have shooed away concerns that these stories are too white because it was another time. But since Black and Brown people didnât just appear out of thin air in the â60s, the continued erasure of our stories and presence in these movies reaffirms our absence in history to modern audiences. If anything, it would have been nice to see more Latinos in the jazz clubs and on stage since it wasnât uncommon for musicians of both backgrounds to play together. But âSylvieâs Loveâ is already leaps and bounds ahead of many other movies that have almost no people of color in New York City. While Asheâs film may have all the sweets and schmaltz of an old school romantic drama, it feels fresh and almost radical to have a period movie so focused on a Black couple with the thrill to see if theyâll live happily ever after.â
âSoulâ
Directed and co-written by Pete Docter, and co-written and codirected by Kemp Powers, âSoulâ is an animated story about a schoolteacher and struggling jazz musician, Joe, who realizes what he loves about life when he is taken to the afterlife and meets 22, a soul not yet assigned to a body. Featuring the voices of Jamie Foxx, Tina Fey and more, âSoulâ begins streaming on Disney+ on Friday.
For The Times, Justin Chang wrote, âItâs New York, in other words, a place that ultimately, and with subtle determination, eclipses the Great Beyond as âSoulâsâ most richly imagined landscape. The city, teeming with life, color and photorealistic details, looks more idyllic and inviting now than ever, even and maybe especially for those of us who donât call it home. As much as all the incessant body swapping and dimension hopping, this vision of New York may be what ultimately marks this story as a fantasy â an escapist evocation of a happier, more carefree moment. But the lingering lesson of âSoul,â a lovely, imperfect movie about lifeâs lovely imperfections, is that every moment is worth living to the fullest, this one very much included.â
For Vanity Fair, Sonia Saraiya wrote, âFortunately, the film manages to be heartwarming and thoughtful about aging and mortality regardless, moving Joeâs character away from his single-minded pursuit and toward a more holistic idea of what heâs accomplished in his life â while revealing to 22 what makes life on Earth worth living. The film takes delight in the everyday pleasures of Joeâs world, pleasures heâs long forgotten to savor himself in the pursuit of his goals. ⌠Despite some distraction and not quite enough music, âSoulâ manages to tap into deep emotion as its characters explore the limits of mortality and what it means to be passionate about life.â
For Vulture, Alison Willmore wrote, âif Pixar has, in recent years, fallen into a rhythm of alternating unpredictable originals with safer sequels to the proven hits, âSoulâ plays not just like one of the former, but like the accumulation of a decadeâs worth of odd ideas. Itâs whimsical and bold and also easier to admire in the abstract than to get deeply emotionally invested in, though it features a late-breaking burst of beauty that will soften the hardest of hearts.â
For rogerebert.com, Matt Zoller Seitz wrote, âDespite feeling like rather minor Pixar overall, âSoulâ will prove to be of historical interest because, when it isnât getting wrapped up in goofy afterlife shenanigans, itâs the most unapologetically Black Pixar project yet released. Its portrayal of jazz is not only accurate in terms of its soundtrack of classic cuts and depiction of performance (the piano and trumpet playing is as correct as anything in Spike Leeâs âMoâ Better Bluesâ) but also its wider cultural context. ⌠This distinction gives weight to lines that might not have registered in a Pixar film with white protagonists, such as 22âs quip, âYou canât crush a soul here. Thatâs what life on Earth is for.ââ
Only good movies
Get the Indie Focus newsletter, Mark Olsen's weekly guide to the world of cinema.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Los Angeles Times.