Arab Times

‘Sharp Objects’ reveals slow & steady power of women’s anger

Clarkson on playing ‘brutal’ woman

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LOS ANGELES, July 9, (RTRS): Calling something a “slow burn” usually means emphasizin­g the “slow.” But “Sharp Objects” proves that the real trick to a masterful slow burn is tapping into a story’s underlying heat and fanning it until the moment when it can finally go up in flames. Every frame crackles with a barely (and expertly) restrained tension — slow and steady, but threatenin­g with every passing second to explode. Where so many other shows would seize every opportunit­y to boil over, “Sharp Objects” simmers with astonishin­g patience — or at least it would be astonishin­g, if women didn’t know that feeling intimately.

“Sharp Objects” is a bruising depiction of the kind of barely, expertly restrained anger that many women know all too well. It reminds us at every turn that women would run through the streets screaming if they could — and that their inability to express as much can eats away at them, bit by bit.

Fury

Every woman on “Sharp Objects” runs on righteous fury, though they rarely acknowledg­e as much in words. Frayed journalist Camille Preaker (Amy Adams) spends most of her waking hours hiding her scars — both figurative and startlingl­y literal, scrawled across her body in her own hand. Camille’s teenage half-sister Amma (Eliza Scanlen) plays the role of dutiful daughter in a sundress when home, but once mom Adora’s (Patricia Clarkson) out of sight, she roller-skates through town sporting cutoff shorts and a wicked smirk. Adora wanders through their family mansion with a perpetual chip on her shoulder and drink in hand, which makes her far more like her wayward daughter than she’d ever care to admit.

“Sharp Objects” drives that particular point home by haunting all three Preaker women with the ghosts of girls past. Camille’s sister died suddenly as a teen, ripping a hole in the family that neither Camille nor Adora ever figured out how to fill (not to mention one that Amma knows she can never fill). Adora and Camille, unable to express their hurt out loud, both turned their anger on themselves. Amma releases hers by finding a target’s weakness and throwing verbal darts at it, pointed and deadly, furious and helpless all at once.

And of course, the only reason Camille even reluctantl­y returns to her hometown of Wind Gap, Missouri is because her editor pushes her to cover the murders of two teen girls, saying that it could be her “big break” if she just strikes the right balance of local flavor with the macabre details. He’s not wrong; as the dozens of similar stories unfolding across TV at any given time prove, it’s a familiar trope that many find irresistib­le. But “Sharp Objects” is selfaware enough not to let the crimes lapse into cliche. What the placid obituaries don’t reveal, for instance, is that both of the girls had defiant tomboy streaks that pushed them to resist the paths laid before them.They didn’t quite fit in anywhere else, and found a safe space to lash out about it and forge their own way in each other, but still couldn’t escape being punished for it — just like Camille, once upon a time.

“Sharp Objects” deals with sexist injustices from the everyday to the deadly with bruising deftness, but it would be disingenuo­us to call it a “#MeToo show”; after all, the Gillian Flynn novel it’s based on was published in 2006 and optioned in 2011. But “Sharp Objects” understand­s women’s anger inside and out — making it not just relevant for our current moment, but revelatory. As “Sharp Objects” and the very cases that spurred #MeToo on show, women have been struggling to express the truth of their trauma and anger for a long, long time. This moment of release isn’t sudden; it’s overdue.

So maybe the most fascinatin­g thing about “Sharp Object’s” case studies of female anger is how, lurking right underneath the eerie surface, lies a palpable frustratio­n that more people (particular­ly more men) won’t take it seriously. Don’t they know how much these women are hurting? Can’t they feel the fury lying dormant all around them, ready and waiting to erupt? The women know how strong their anger is; they feel it every time they aim it directly at their own hearts. So why isn’t everyone else more scared of them? They could burn everything to the ground, if only they got the chance.

At a time when so many stories both in the news and the scripted space are focusing on how men can harm women, HBO’s limited series “Sharp Objects,” focuses on the damage women can do to each other. The series, which is based on Gillian Flynn’s novel, explores the trauma three generation­s of women of an affluent family have experience­d due to mental illness.

“Some of the harshest times I’ve had in this business have been women executives. Have I had a million men write me — producers, directors, co-stars — invite me to their hotel rooms? Of course, but there’s also been a harsh level coming from female executives,” star Patricia Clarkson tells Variety. “So I think on the whole women can be tough on other women in ways that men are not, in terms of judgment and certain characters. I think that’s just natural. I knew that when I took this part on. I knew it was going to be a very steep climb, but that’s part of the challenge.”

In “Sharp Objects,” Clarkson plays matriarch Adora Crellin, whose mental illness is clear from the start. As episodes go on, the extent of her issues in coping with trauma deepens, with tragic consequenc­es.

“She’s deeply troubled, and clearly needed help and medication,” Clarkson says. “You have to realize this is a cyclical trauma, this generation­al trauma and pain that has led to three incredibly damaged women — a mother and two daughters.”

Also:

LOS ANGELES: Streaming giant, Netflix will bow its first Indian original horror series “Ghoul” on Aug 24. The three episodes will be available to the service’s 125 million subscriber­s in 190 countries, including India.

Based on Arabic folklore, “Ghoul” is set in a covert detention center and follows an interrogat­or who arrives at the facility to discover that some of the terrorists held there are not of this world. Written and directed by Patrick Graham (“Phir Se”,) and starring Radhika Apte (“Padman”) and Manav Kaul (“Tumhari Sulu”,) “Ghoul” is a co-production between Blumhouse Production­s, Ivanhoe Pictures and India’s Phantom Films.

“Ghoul” is a thrilling horror series, both frightenin­g and insightful. Its high production value, a chilling performanc­e from Radhika Apte, and quality writing are sure to scare Indian and global audiences alike,” said Simran Sethi, director, Netflix Internatio­nal Originals.

Apte is also one of the stars of the first Netflix India original series “Sacred Games” that released on the service July 6 to wide acclaim. Starring Bollywood’s Saif Ali Khan (“Chef”) and Nawazuddin Siddiqui (“Manto”,) and directed by Vikramadit­ya Motwane (“Trapped”) and Anurag Kashyap (“Gangs of Wasseypur”) the series is a crime drama based on the bestsellin­g novel by Vikram Chandra.

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