2020-04-01_Total_Film

(Joyce) #1

I


am a nice guy!” pleads Christopher Mintz-Plasse’s
not-so-nice Neil in writer/director Emerald
Fennell’s blistering feature debut. He’s one of
dozens of men to have failed Cassandra Thomas’
test. Played by a rarely better Carey Mulligan, Cassie
spends her evenings in bars, feigning legless inebriation
until a ‘nice guy’ picks her up. How far they go is up to
them, but consent is never given and if they ignore
Cassandra’s repeated protests... well, that would be telling.

MO, and you’ll find a film that’s rooted
in the repercussions of trauma – both
the act itself and the scars that refuse to
fade in the absence of justice. “We get
accusations like this all the time,” says
the college dean who, a few years prior,
covered up a crime that drives Cassie’s
every action. “I have to give him the
benefit of the doubt.” It’s a chilling
line, but one that gets to the heart of
what makes Fennell’s script so cutting.
In parallel with Cassie’s ongoing
mission, the thirtysomething med-
school dropout strikes up a relationship
with former classmate Ryan (Bo
Burnham). As she begins to drop her
defences after years of singledom, the
two share a sincere connection,
bonding over awkward dinners with
Cassie’s loving parents (Clancy Brown,
Jennifer Coolidge) and impromptu
dance parties in the local pharmacy. In
a different film, their chemistry would
make for a charming romcom. Here,
it opens up questions about whether
Cassie can truly reconcile her need

for vengeance with a life of her own.
Mulligan – a consistently captivating
screen presence since she shot to
attention in Lone Scherfig’s An Education


  • is operating on another level here.
    Intimidating and vulnerable, confident
    and in crisis; Cassie’s contradictions are
    what make her such a compelling
    character. She isn’t The Bride or even
    Lisbeth Salander, and wrestles with the
    consequences of her actions, despite
    her righteous intentions. Because she’s
    ultimately a good person, Cassie so
    often is denied the catharsis she
    desperately craves, and so too is the
    audience, Fennell challenging genre
    expectations at every turn.
    Striking styling and a distractingly
    cool soundtrack (that ‘Toxic’ remix from
    the trailer is the tip of the iceberg) can
    get in the way of the serious story
    Fennell is telling. Meanwhile, the ending
    is destined to be one of the year’s most
    divisive, taking a huge swing and not
    quite hitting the mark. But on this
    evidence, Fennell is a promising young
    filmmaker indeed. Jordan Farley


THE VERDICT
Carey Mulligan is electric in a blackly
comic #MeToo revenge thriller fuelled
by righteous fury.

Billed as a “delicious new take on
revenge”, the first thing to note about
Promising Young Woman is it probably
isn’t the film you think it is. Look past
the cupcake-coloured aesthetics, darkly
comic tone and Cassandra’s provocative

CERTIFICATETBCDIRECTOREmerald
FennellSTARRINGCareyMulliganBo
BurnhamLaverneCoxClancyBrown
JenniferCoolidgeSCREENPLAYEmerald
FennellDISTRIBUTORUniversalPictures
RUNNINGTIME minutes

PROMISING


YOUNG WOMAN


The predator trap...


OUT 17 APRIL


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