The Mercury (Pottstown, PA)

Rage, reckoning come to forefront in ‘Promising Young Woman’

- By Lindsey Bahr

Emerald Fennel l wanted to write about female rage. Before #MeToo became ubiquitous, she had been thinking about complacenc­y and the teen movies of her youth where consent was often little more than a throwaway joke. That’s when the idea for her audacious debut “Promising Young Woman,” out Friday, started to take shape.

There wouldn’t be a machete or a machine gun involved, as there often is in movies about women seeking revenge. And it wouldn’t be a dour weepie either. Instead, her film would be inviting and colorful with a pop soundtrack and a likable cast. And her protagonis­t Cassie, played by Carey Mulligan, would be the scariest of all avengers: A real woman.

“I think comedy is usually the best way of communicat­ing anything really

difficult,” Fennell said. “I wanted to make a film that was accessible to everyone, that would say like, ‘OK, come in, everyone’s welcome. But, sorry, now that you’re here, the doors are locked.’”

Cassie dropped out of med school after something traumatic happened and now works at a coffee shop in the day and goes out to bars at night

appearing to be blind drunk. It’s only after she’s gone home with supposed “good guys” that she reveals she is quite the opposite. Fennell knew Mulligan wouldn’t fight to make her nice.

“She’s an enormously subtle and enigmatic performer and very grounded,” Fennell said. “Because the movie is sort of allegorica­l and heightened it really needed the person playing Cassie to feel completely real.”

Mulligan didn’t hesitate to sign on and was taken aback recently when someone asked if she had any trepidatio­n around playing a “controvers­ial role.”

“There is literally nothing controvers­ial about this,” Mulligan said. “We’re just seeing it for the kind of disturbing truth that it is as opposed to a sort of odd trivializa­tion.”

The supporting cast is packed with familiar faces like Bo Burnham, Jennifer Coolidge, Adam Brody, Alison Brie, Laverne Cox, Alfred Molina, Connie Britton, Molly Shannon and Max Greenfield, to name a few. Mulligan said the quick 23-day-shoot felt like a revolving door of excellent actors who would often be there for a day or less.

“The writing was so strong and everyone just wanted to be in it,” Mulligan said. “There’s no empty role.”

And it wasn’t a coincidenc­e that many of them are comedians.

“It’s very easy to be villainous in a kind of sexy way. It’s quite difficult to be weak and lazy and pathetic and misogynist­ic in a sort of ill-thought out way. The great thing about comedians in general is they think about this stuff all the time. They’re very self-aware and very eager to find those awkward, funny, nasty spaces,” Fennell said. “It’s also incredibly useful if you’re making a film like this where you want to talk about good people doing bad things. If you’re using actors who we already identify as good, who we have crushes on, who we think are really funny and cute and great or women who we feel like are our best friends or somebody who we would go to in an emergency...that’s when you start to make the audience a little bit complicit or at least stretch their allegiance­s.”

 ?? PHOTO BY TAYLOR JEWELL/INVISION/AP, FILE ?? Actors Carey Mulligan, from left, Bo Burnham and writer/director Emerald Fennell pose for a portrait to promote their film “Promising Young Woman” during the Sundance Film Festival in Park City, Utah on Jan. 25.
PHOTO BY TAYLOR JEWELL/INVISION/AP, FILE Actors Carey Mulligan, from left, Bo Burnham and writer/director Emerald Fennell pose for a portrait to promote their film “Promising Young Woman” during the Sundance Film Festival in Park City, Utah on Jan. 25.

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