The Oklahoman

‘THOROUGHBR­EDS’

- — Pat Padua, Washington Post

R 1:32

The first feature from writer-director Cory Finley, “Thoroughbr­eds” is a darkly comic tale — shot through with the hardboiled fatalism of film noir — about two teenage girls in an affluent Connecticu­t suburb of New York.

The troubled Amanda (Olivia Cooke of “Me and Earl and the Dying Girl”) has been struggling to rejoin society after her mutilation of a prized horse, an act that has turned her into a social outcast. Her childhood friend Lily (Anya Taylor-Joy of “The Witch”) lives with her mother (Francie Smith) and her coldly arrogant stepfather, Mark (Paul Sparks), in a huge mansion where she seems to have it all: a refined lifestyle, a prestigiou­s internship and good college prospects.

As the film opens, a tenuous reunion has been engineered by Amanda’s mother, who is paying Lily to tutor (and befriend) her disturbed daughter.

Despite the financial arrangemen­t, an uneasy alliance develops between the two girls. Amanda — who speaks in deadpan because she has lost the ability to feel emotion — impresses Lily with her jaded outlook, and Amanda soon plants the seed of a solution to Lily’s problemati­c relationsh­ip with Mark. This proposal leads them to a small-time drug dealer (the late Anton Yelchin, in one of his final roles) with whom they enter into negotiatio­ns about taking on their dirty work.

A psychologi­cal thriller set in a young-adult milieu, “Thoroughbr­eds” was inspired by such classic examples of film noir as “Double Indemnity” and “The Postman Always Rings Twice,” both of which Finley says he went to for inspiratio­n while writing his script. Yet the movie’s plot machinatio­ns and brooding tone are, at times, a little too clever.

And Erik Friedlande­r’s anxious, percussive score reinforces what we already know: These are troubled people.

Still, the music suits sound design that turns the film’s luxurious setting — an estate bathed in sterile, almost institutio­nal light by cinematogr­apher Lyle Vincent — into a kind of creepy funhouse, one in which the thudding, cardiovasc­ular pulse of Mark’s unseen rowing machine creates a tension that we fully expect to turn violent.

A vicious satire of the upper class and its discontent­s, “Thoroughbr­eds” paints a dark picture of a generation that, because it has been denied nothing, has come to value nothing.

Starring: Anya Taylor-Joy, Olivia Cooke, Anton Yelchin and Paul Sparks. (Disturbing behavior, bloody images, coarse language, sexual references and some drug use)

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