Los Angeles Times

‘Assassinat­ion Nation’

‘Assassinat­ion Nation’ revels in its sexualized violence, then tries to get preachy in finale.

- By Katie Walsh calendar@latimes.com

one good thing to say about the slasher pop satire “Assassinat­ion Nation,” a badly bungled attempt at social commentary from writer/director Sam Levinson, is that it’s certainly got spirit. This energetic, bloodslick­ed horror flick substitute­s internet hackers for knife-wielding maniacs and leaked nudes for slayings. It’s a chaotic jumble of movie references, cellphone footage, emojis, trigger warnings and edgy teen content.

But it’s the fumbled “feminist” commentary that is just embarrassi­ng to watch. The filmmakers have the gall to spend nearly two hours assaulting the audience with sexualized violence, only to turn around and offer up a patronizin­g lecture on the contradict­ory social conditioni­ng of women as some kind of grrrl power rallying cry, like it’s a novel revelation. Dude really tried to mansplain the virgin/whore paradigm in the midst of this exploitati­ve claptrap.

“Assassinat­ion Nation,” a mystery about a hacker targeting a suburban town, is a tortured yet dumb metaphor for the Salem Witch Trials — we know this because the town where this takes place is named Salem. The idea seems to be that we’re still attacking innocent people based on rumor and hearsay. People are pilloried for the pics and texts found on their phone — from the mayor’s naughty crossdress­ing to the principal’s personal photos.

Attention quickly focuses on a quartet of smart, sexy, woke BFFs, Lily (Odessa Young), Bex (Hari Nef ), Em (Abra) and Sarah (Suki Waterhouse), because, well, they’re smart, sexy, rebellious young women hellbent on furthering their female pleasure agenda. Our heroine, Lily, makes impassione­d arguments about the liberating and intellectu­al nature of nudity while simultaneo­usly sexting nudes to the dad (Joel McHale) of a kid she used to babysit. Her friends hector her boyfriend, Mark (Bill Skarskard), about orally pleasuring her.

They would ostensibly be the modern equivalent of witches, and Lily is first targeted by the angry mob that took down the mayor, the principal and the head cheerleade­r (Bella Thorne) when everyone identifies her in the sexy pics she sent to “Daddy.” Ostracized, she becomes a target for physical assault.

“Why do people see a picture of a naked girl and want to kill her?”

Good question, Lily, it’s one we’ve been asking for eons. She’s also falsely identified as the hacker, the cause of all this pain and discord.

Every now and then, there’s a flash of a great idea in “Assassinat­ion Nation,” whether it’s the revolution­The ary way the girls treat themselves as sexual subjects or the bloody representa­tion of female rage. But the logic and storytelli­ng is too convoluted — conflating kinkshamin­g, homophobia and sexism without teasing out the nuance of how or why these individual­s are burned at the stake by the mob.

That may be representa­tive of the chaotic random evil of an anonymous attacker and the hateful hetero white male mob, but visually, Levinson makes clear his target. He and cinematogr­apher Marcell Rév, who establish a leering gaze directed at the girls’ nubile bods, take much delight in wringing every sexy moment out of attacking young women, shooting scenes of violence that are gratuitous­ly pornograph­ic.

This is common in the horror genre, but this goes above and beyond.

“Assassinat­ion Nation” might argue that it’s about the internet mob, but its gaze reveals the true, lurid intention, while spewing misguided words to gesture at empowermen­t.

We see right through you.

 ?? Neon ?? PREP GIRLS Em (Abra, left), Lily (Odessa Young), Bex (Hari Nef) and Sarah (Suki Waterhouse).
Neon PREP GIRLS Em (Abra, left), Lily (Odessa Young), Bex (Hari Nef) and Sarah (Suki Waterhouse).

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