The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

‘Rough Night’ is a wild ride

- By Katie Walsh

As women achieve more milestones toward gender parity in film (and there’s still a long way to go to), steps toward equality don’t always have to be positive or uplifting images of womanhood. Sometimes, it’s more relevant when female characters can be just as raunchy, drunk, morally corrupt and beloved as their badly behaved male counterpar­ts. “Rough Night,” from “Broad City” writers Lucia Aniello and Paul W. Downs (they cowrote the script while Aniello directed and Downs stars in the film), is the first R-rated Hollywood studio film directed by a woman, about women, in decades. It not only pushes the boundary of questionab­le behavior, it does a handstand on top of it, and fortunatel­y, they just about nail the landing.

“Rough Night” is a riff on the premise of the 1998 dark comedy “Very Bad Things,” wherein Jeremy Piven and pals accidental­ly kill a sex worker during a wild night of partying. That film ended up fairly bleak and misogynist­ic, and “Rough Night” has to do much more than just flip the genders to erase the ickiness that comes with murdering a sex worker. Fortunatel­y, Aniello and Downs manage to elide the severity of that act with some clever plotting, and a whole lot of weird and wacky elements to distract from that.

In what may very well be our first post-Hillary comedy, Scarlett Johansson stars as Jessica, a budding politician running for state Senate (she even has a Hillary-style haircut). Neverthele­ss, she heads to Miami with her college girlfriend­s for her bacheloret­te weekend. Johansson plays the straight man in her posse, which includes over-enthusiast­ic kindergart­en teacher Alice ( Jillian Bell), activist Frankie (Ilana Glazer), wealthy divorcee Blair (Zoe Kravitz) and Aussie flower child Pippa (Kate McKinnon).

It’s standard party girl stuff, until Alice accidental­ly manslaught­ers the young man they’ve invited into their pad as a stripper, and they decide that instead of calling the police, they’ll dispose of the body. The film takes pains to establish the death as somewhat justified, and humor comes not from the corpse desecratio­n, as they “Weekend At Bernie’s” him around, but the tangential tornado of chaos.

Bell is a standout as the unhinged Alice, and both she and Downs turn in the funniest performanc­es of the movie because they commit so fully, with a manic intensity, and wide-eyed determinat­ion, to the bit. McKinnon is also predictabl­y great, on her own Aussie planet. You almost wish that “Rough Night” had been given a second pass, to sharpen some jokes and smooth the transition­s and edges, but the bumps in the road are easy to overlook with this excellent cast.

 ?? PICTURES VIA AP CONTRIBUTE­D BY MACALL POLAY/SONY, COLUMBIA ?? Kate McKinnon, left, and Jillian Bell star in a scene from “Rough Night.”
PICTURES VIA AP CONTRIBUTE­D BY MACALL POLAY/SONY, COLUMBIA Kate McKinnon, left, and Jillian Bell star in a scene from “Rough Night.”

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