The Middletown Press (Middletown, CT)

Film takes on race, privilege, power

- By Michael Phillips

“Sorry to Bother You” is about a telemarket­er who becomes a superstar, for a price. It’s a science fiction allegory, though the science fiction angle emerges late in the game. It’s a provocativ­e, serious, ridiculous, screwy concoction about whiteface, cultural code-switching, African-American identities and twisted new forms of wage slavery, beyond previously known ethical limits.

Premiering earlier this year at Sundance, the film comes from rapper and musician Boots Riley of the funk-tinged, Oakland, California-based hip-hop band the Coup, who makes his feature debut here as screenwrit­er and director. I’ve seen it twice now, and while its climactic scenes cave in on themselves, maybe unavoidabl­y, en route there’s a tremendous amount going on, in 17 different directions. Cohesion? Neatness? Neatness may count in the Neatness Olympics, but in movies it’s an overrated commodity.

In 2012 the Coup released an album with the same title, “Sorry to Bother You,” after Riley had begun wrestling with his script. McSweeney’s published the screenplay two years later, which brought it to the attention of the Sundance Lab. Riley’s freewheeli­ng comic imaginatio­n belongs to itself, first and foremost, the way Michel Gondry’s movies belong to Michel Gondry, and Spike Jonze movies belong to Spike Jonze, and Alex Cox’s “Repo Man,” which operated on a similar collision between realism and the fantastic, belongs to itself alone.

Scene One: Cassius “Cash” Green applies for a job. Green’s played by the terrific Lakeith Stanfield, Darius on “Atlanta” and the straw-hatted harbinger of trouble in “Get Out.” The job Green seeks, and finds, requires working the phones at a genericall­y equipped facility somewhere in Oakland. With his lover, a visual and performanc­e artist named Detroit, Green lives in the garage of the house owned by his cash-strapped uncle (Terry Crews). Tessa Thompson plays Detroit, who also works as a street-corner sign-twirler, and here she continues her unerring streak of late. Thompson is one of the most valuable talents on screen today, and she has a way of making everything matter and mean something, from Valkyrie in “Thor: Ragnarok” on down.

On his first day, Green notices a special, ornate elevator off to one side of the lobby. This is a VIP conveyance, used only by the highest-performing telemarket­ers, aka the “Power Callers.” Urged by a co-worker (Danny Glover) to adopt a “white voice” (“not Will Smith white,” though, he notes), Green suddenly discovers the secret to this job’s success. In “Sorry to Bother You,” one character’s white voice is provided by Patton Oswalt; Green’s comes from David Cross. Truly these are two of the whitest voices on White Earth.

As Green ascends the corporate ladder, his fellow workers (including Detroit, and a labor organizer played by Steven Yeun of “The Walking Dead”) organize a telemarket­ers strike. The clashes between management and labor are all over the news; in “Sorry to Bother You,” the TVs are tuned either to strike news, a massively beloved game show called “I Got the S - Kicked Out of Me!” or reports on a strange new lifetime-employment venture called WorryFree, where workers live in hostel-like quarters at factories they’ll never leave.

While Green risks losing Detroit by crossing her picket line as a Power Caller on high, “Sorry to Bother You” eventually reveals to Green (and us) exactly what’s expected of him once he is ushered into the rarefied universe of WorryFree’s CEO, played by a feverishly charismati­c Armie Hammer. These later scenes are tricky and a little bit problemati­c; the way certain creatures are depicted dissipate the tension rather than heighten it. Unlike Jordan Peele’s “Get Out,” Riley’s film risks a fair percentage of its potential audience by making Green a conflicted, compromise­d figure, i.e., by letting him make his own mistakes. That same percentage of the audience may not take the story’s leap into “Island of Lost Souls” territory.

“Sorry to Bother You” may prod memories of such late ’60s/early ’70s socialraci­al satires as “Putney Swope” and “Watermelon Man” (both, and in retrospect pretty obviously, written by white men). “Sorry to Bother You” sets up a premise along similar lines — but without the caricature­s, or the strident courting of a mainstream audience. Nuts as it gets, Riley’s movie feels like real life.

 ?? Annapurna Pictures / Contribute­d photo ?? Lakeith Stanfield as Cassius Green in a scene from the film “Sorry To Bother You.”
Annapurna Pictures / Contribute­d photo Lakeith Stanfield as Cassius Green in a scene from the film “Sorry To Bother You.”

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