The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

‘Miss Sloane’ is salacious and smart

- By Katie Walsh

“Lobbying is about foresight,” Miss Madeleine Elizabeth Sloane ( Jessica Chastain) declares. It’s her mantra, her battle cry, her affirmatio­n. In the crackling political drama “Miss Sloane,” lobbying is a game of chess, and the best lobbyists can see the moves and twists steps ahead of their opponents. Miss Sloane, Liz for short, happens to be the best player in the game.

Directed by John Madden with a coolly elegant verve, “Miss Sloane” zings with the internal electricit­y generated from its script, penned by firsttime writer Jonathan Perera. Chastain, as the ruthlessly competitiv­e, ambitious and powerful lobbyist, reels off machine-gun rounds of dialogue — monologuin­g, debating, lecturing and preaching the gospel of whatever client is paying the bills. She articulate­ly parries and jabs and delivers verbal roundhouse­s in her style of no-holds-barred down-and-dirty political combat. A congressio­nal hearing investigat­ing the ethics of her work serves as the framing device for the story of “Miss Sloane,” with flashbacks to color in her more devious doings as D.C.’s most cutthroat lobbyist, which have led to her pleading the Fifth before Rep. Ron Sperling ( John Lithgow).

With a reputation that precedes her, she’s not above cackling in the face of a high-powered gun rights advocate when he suggests she lead a campaign to bring more women to his side of the gun debate. Though she laughs because she finds the plan trite and misguided, there might be something more behind her dismissal. This issue takes her from her conservati­ve lobbying firm to a liberal boutique agency representi­ng the opposing team. The film offers only morsels in terms of her personal history — focusing instead on her vices — but there’s a nagging thought that something more might be motivating her political assault on guns.

The debate about gun control is both startlingl­y current and an unfortunat­ely evergreen topic to power this sordid D.C. tale. The stakes are high and the consequenc­es are all too starkly realistic when it comes to the narrative around guns in this country, and the film stares directly down the barrel of the controvers­y.

“Miss Sloane” sharply dissects how politics as usual has slid into a swamp of special interests, bribes and constant campaignin­g. The real wars are waged by the lobbyists pressing the flesh at receptions and on the front pages of newspapers. Liz is very much a general in this war. She’s crisply outfitted in a uniform of highend black, white and neutral pieces (the costume design by Georgina Yarhi is nothing short of stunning); her war paint slicked on in the form of a slash of crimson lipstick.

She marshals a company of young, hungry Sloane wannabes, a diverse, techsavvy, fast-talking bunch molding themselves in her likeness. A special protege, Esme (Gugu Mbatha-Raw), just as whipsmart and sharp as Liz, though softer and more empathetic, manages to penetrate the Sloane armor, and their friendship heightens the stakes.

The third-act twist brings to bear the thriller roots just below the slick prestige surface. Though it’s never schlocky, the inevitable conclusion feels baser than the heady moral and ethical philosophi­zing that precedes it. The production value, smooth direction and Chastain’s showstoppi­ng performanc­e elevate “Miss Sloane” above typical genre fare, though it lands a one-two punch in managing to be both salacious and smart.

 ?? KERRY HAYES/EUROPA VIA AP ?? Mark Strong, left, and Jessica Chastain star in a scene from “Miss Sloane.”
KERRY HAYES/EUROPA VIA AP Mark Strong, left, and Jessica Chastain star in a scene from “Miss Sloane.”

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