Derby Telegraph

Avenger’s endgame

Carey Mulligan is riveting playing the guilt-ridden friend of a sexual assault victim out to get justice

- REVIEWS BY DAMON SMITH

OSCAR-NOMINATED writerdire­ctor and now Bafta winner Emerald Fennell sharpens her claws with a provocativ­e thriller that draws blood from the efforts of an avenging angel (Carey Mulligan) to dole out the justice denied to her best friend in the aftermath of a sexual assault.

Promising Young Woman, winner of Best British Film and Best Original Screenplay at Sunday’s Baftas, strikes a sickening chord, culminatin­g in arguably the most harrowing scene of the year – a bachelor party underscore­d by a deliciousl­y discordant orchestral arrangemen­t of Britney Spears’ Toxic.

The film’s twisted sense of humour is as dark as the warpaint mascara Mulligan etches around her bloodshot eyes to complement her smeared lipstick and affect the dishevelle­d dispositio­n of a drunk woman unable to protect herself from predators who believe she is “just asking for it”.

Tally scores and men’s names, scrawled in red biro in a notebook, intimate a dark and intriguing facet, which Fennell chooses to keep off screen. By omitting one side of a complex story, it is easier to pull off her jaw-dropping coup de grace. However, the imbalance is a persistent niggle.

Like the ferociousl­y intelligen­t and driven central character, who drops out of medical school when her life implodes, Promising Young Woman exercises restraint and holds itself back when I wish it would go for broke.

Cassie Thomas (Mulligan) abandons dreams of studying medicine at Forrest University when her best friend Nina is raped by classmate Al Monroe (Chris Lowell) and the dean (Connie Britton) chooses to believe his version of events.

Now 30 and still living at home with her parents, Cassie is haunted by the past.

A chance encounter with university classmate Ryan Cooper (Bo Burnham), now a paediatric doctor, rubs fresh salt into unhealed wounds and sets Cassie on a collision course with Al’s conspirato­rs including his lawyer (Alfred Molina).

Promising Young Woman chooses its polished words with care, burning off extraneous dramatic fat to retain a laser-like focus on Cassie.

Oscar-nominated Mulligan is utterly fearless in the lead role, while Fennell’s assurance behind the camera gives us the courage to stare unflinchin­gly into the abyss, as Cassie makes her perilous descent, hoping to defy gravity and repair what is, sadly, beyond saving.

■ On Sky Cinema from Friday

 ??  ?? DANGEROUS LIAISONS: Carey Mulligan is superb as Cassie
DANGEROUS LIAISONS: Carey Mulligan is superb as Cassie
 ??  ?? Cassie and Ryan (Bo Burnham)
Cassie and Ryan (Bo Burnham)

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