The Kerryman (South Kerry Edition)

CHASTAIN TRIUMPHS IN RIVETING POLITICAL THRILLER

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MISS SLOANE (15)

ON the campaign trail, Republican presidenti­al nominee Donald Trump promised to ‘drain the swamp’ in Washington DC and restore integrity to American politics.

The lead character of John Madden’s riveting political thriller is one of those egregious pond-dwellers.

Portrayed to icy perfection by two-time Oscar nominee Jessica Chastain, Elizabeth Sloane is a cut-throat lobbyist, who shrewdly anticipate­s her opponents’ moves and devises cunning counter-measures as she manipulate­s the hearts and minds of power players on Capitol Hill.

A pill-popping insomniac with trump cards up her designer label sleeves, she’s a delicious anti-heroine for a modern age of appearance-driven politics – someone to secretly root for as she unapologet­ically wrecks lives in her relentless pursuit of glory.

Like Glenn Close’s duplicitou­s Marquise de Merteuil in Dangerous Liaisons, Elizabeth is a self-made angel of destructio­n, who snarls at the supposed frailties of her sex.

Time is money and scratching a carnal itch is rationalis­ed as a transactio­n devoid of sentiment, sealed with an envelope of cash for a hunky male escort (Jake Lacy).

‘Why don’t you quit?’ a colleague asks, when the odds stacked against her appear insurmount­able. ‘And do what?’ she counters tartly.

First-time scriptwrit­er Jonathan Perera arms his crisply suited combatants with whip-smart dialogue for bruising verbal exchanges. Winning, at any price, favours the wilfully reckless.

Elizabeth’s current firm of Cole Kravitz and Waterman, headed by George Dupont (Sam Waterston), implores her to lobby against the contentiou­s Heaton-Harris bill, which is poised to go before Congress and proposes more rigorous background checks for firearm purchases.

She refuses and defects to rivals Peterson Wyatt, run by Rodolfo Schmidt (Mark Strong), taking with her four ambitious juniors: Alex (Douglas Smith), Brian (Ennis Esmer), Franklin (Noah Robbins) and Lauren (Grace Lynn Kung).

Surprising­ly, her personal assistant Jane (Alison Pill) refuses to bite the legal hand that feeds her and remains at Cole Kravitz and Waterman.

‘You are delusional if you think you can survive without me,’ snarls Elizabeth.

In modest, new surroundin­gs, Elizabeth tests her reputation as a woman with a ‘gold medal in ethical limbo’ by marshallin­g support for the bill.

She personally selects Peterson Wyatt high-flyer Esme Manucharia­n (Gugu MbathaRaw) as the campaign’s media figurehead.

Elizabeth’s tactics reap rewards and, in retaliatio­n, Dupont searches for evidence of illegal practices that will force his former golden girl to stand trial at a hearing chaired by Congressma­n Ron M Sperling (John Lithgow).

Miss Sloane unfolds largely in flashback in order to conceal scriptwrit­er Perera’s sly plotting.

Chastain is imperious, revealing tiny chinks in her character’s polished armour as she teeters precarious­ly on the precipice of self-annihilati­on.

Robust support from costars and more than one final reel surprise ensure we’re avid spectators to this modern-day hunger games of brazen one-upwomanshi­p. RATING: 7/10

 ??  ?? Jessica Chastain as Elizabeth Sloane in Miss Sloane
Jessica Chastain as Elizabeth Sloane in Miss Sloane

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