Total Film

PROMISING YOUNG WOMAN

The predator trap…

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The second vital #MeToo movie coming your way.

OUT 17 APRIL

Iam 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.

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

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 medschool 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.

 ??  ?? CERTIFICAT­E TBC DIRECTOR Emerald Fennell STARRING Carey Mulligan, Bo Burnham, Laverne Cox, Clancy Brown, Jennifer Coolidge SCREENPLAY Emerald Fennell DISTRIBUTO­R Universal Pictures RUNNING TIME 113 minutes
Carey Mulligan goes on a righteous rampage of revenge.
CERTIFICAT­E TBC DIRECTOR Emerald Fennell STARRING Carey Mulligan, Bo Burnham, Laverne Cox, Clancy Brown, Jennifer Coolidge SCREENPLAY Emerald Fennell DISTRIBUTO­R Universal Pictures RUNNING TIME 113 minutes Carey Mulligan goes on a righteous rampage of revenge.
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