Chicago Sun-Times

‘SANCTUARY’ CREEPS LESS INTERESTIN­G THAN THEY THINK THEY ARE

Two tedious people — a rich businessma­n and his predatory dominatrix — play mind games in empty-calorie psychologi­cal drama ‘Sanctuary’

- RICHARD ROEPER MOVIE COLUMNIST rroeper@suntimes.com | @RichardERo­eper

It’s just the three of us in a luxury hotel suite for virtually the entirety of Zachary Wigon’s slick and cynical, empty-calorie psychologi­cal sexual drama “Sanctuary.” Let’s see, there’s Margaret Qualley’s Rebecca, Christophe­r Abbott’s Hal — and the viewer.

About halfway through the night, this particular viewer was thinking about calling a Lyft and leaving these shallow, petty and immature narcissist­s to themselves. Although “Sanctuary” is stylish and initially intriguing, it’s eventually a chore to spend an entire feature-length film (even with a relatively brief running time of 96 minutes) with two boors who are also kind of boring, despite all the histrionic­s and fang-baring and manipulati­ve mind games. They find themselves and each other a lot more interestin­g than we do.

“Sanctuary” begins with Qualley’s Rebecca in a blonde bob and velvety, hunter green business suit, sitting across the table from Abbott’s slightly disheveled and sweaty Hal, screening him for a position as CEO of his father’s hotel empire. The questions become ever more personal and bizarre — until they break character, and we see they’re actually role-playing from a script, literally a script.

While it’s true that Hal is the presumptiv­e heir to his recently deceased father’s hotel regime, Rebecca is actually his longtime dominatrix. Next thing we know it, Rebecca is commanding Hal to strip down to his underwear, get down on his hands and knees and scrub the bathroom floor (“I want you to clean behind the toilet, that’s where the dirt is”), and the weakspined Hal is complying, bowing like a puppy that’s been scolded.

This is but the first time Micah Bloomberg’s script pulls the rug out from under us, but the subsequent reveals aren’t particular­ly surprising — up to and including a denouement that feels arbitrary and forced.

We can see Hal is a privileged jerk, but when he tries to cut off his arrangemen­t with Rebecca or remind her that he has the wealth and power to destroy her, it rings hollow. She clearly has the upper hand, and he secretly wants it that way, so we’re subjected to numerous scenes in which Rebecca subjugates Hal and humiliates him sexually and psychologi­cally.

Margaret Qualley is a wonderful actor, but she’s slight and she looks and sounds even younger than her 28 years, and at times it’s a stretch to believe her as a predatory dominatrix. Abbott, on the other hand, perfectly plays the insecure, not particular­ly bright Hal, who keeps telling Rebecca (and himself ) he’s well-suited to succeed his legendary, late father.

One of the problems with “Sanctuary” is while these two are convinced they’re involved in a chess game with the highest possible stakes, it really boils down to whether or not Hal will ascend to become CEO of his father’s empire (which he doesn’t really seem to want all that much), or just continue on as an ineffectua­l and wealthy jellyfish, and whether Rebecca will extract millions from Hal, or keep working in her chosen field, which seems to pay pretty well. However it plays out, it’s a good thing these two found each other, no matter how unorthodox their arrangemen­t, because it’s hard to imagine a lot of folks volunteeri­ng to spend much quality time with either one of them.

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 ?? NEON ?? A dominatrix (Margaret Qualley) resists the efforts of her client (Christophe­r Abbott) to end their arrangemen­t in “Sanctuary.”
NEON A dominatrix (Margaret Qualley) resists the efforts of her client (Christophe­r Abbott) to end their arrangemen­t in “Sanctuary.”

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