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Crown star takes on rape culture

- Promising Young Woman is available on Sky Cinema and Now TV.

AYOUNG woman in crumpled business attire is drunk and alone in a bar. She is fumbling around looking for her lost phone. A man in a work suit, tie loosened and collar unbuttoned, cracks a few “jokes” with his friends at her expense before going over under the guise of “helping her get home”.

Except he doesn’t help her get home, but instead takes her back to his place, hoping she’s too far gone to resist his advances. It’s a scenario that, in prepandemi­c times, might seem painfully familiar.

But in the new film Promising Young Woman, she isn’t actually black-out drunk.

And when the so-called “nice guy” starts taking her clothes off, she snaps into focus and, in a chilling and stonecold sober tone, demands to know what he is doing and shames his predatory behaviour.

This is the opening of The Crown actress Emerald Fennell’s accomplish­ed directoria­l debut, which is nominated for five Oscars.

“What is so fascinatin­g about this stuff, and so troubling about it, is it was and remains completely commonplac­e,” 35-year-old Fennell says.

“And it was important right from the get-go when writing it that there is nothing in this movie that hasn’t been played for gags in quite recent Hollywood comedy movies or network comedy TV series or songs.

“The culture that we grew up in, and that so many people grew up in, made a joke of getting girls drunk and taking them home, girls waking up not knowing who was next to them and going on a walk of shame.

“This stuff was just normal and so it was very interestin­g and exciting and also terrible to then start to examine it.” Carey Mulligan plays Cassie Thomas, a former medical student whose life has been derailed by the rape of her best friend, Nina.

Cassie processes her rage and trauma by feigning blackout inebriatio­n and baiting men (played by classic TV nice guys such as The OC’s Adam Brody and Superbad’s Christophe­r Mintz-Plasse) into taking advantage of her, before giving them the fright of their lives by revealing it was a trap all along.

“It felt like a different lens through which we have seen so many stories before,” says 35-year-old Mulligan, who is nominated for an Oscar for her performanc­e, “and I just thought it was such a unique way of looking at this.

“The more we talk about things like this, I think there can be somewhat of a fatigue with difficult things.

“I think finding a new way to talk about them, a new way to raise questions, it does bring that to a wider audience than perhaps a different version of this film might have.

“Not that that is the absolute intent of this film, but it does do that.”

The film merges a picture-perfect Instagram aesthetic of pastel colours, tousled plaits and kitsch neon with Fennell’s knife-sharp social commentary.

Asked if she deliberate­ly wanted to use beautiful visuals to lure people into a false sense of security before going in for the kill, Fennell, who is nominated for the best director Oscar but might be best known to audiences for playing Camilla in The Crown, jokes: “That’s how I do all of my murders. It was important that this is a film about appearance­s being deceiving,” she adds.

“Whether it’s the kind of men we like and have crushes on, who end up doing bad things, or whether it’s Cassie dressing like a beautiful candyfloss, it’s important that the movie is just as alluring and enticing as all of these things are and then it’s got a slightly troubling centre maybe.”

Fennell does not let anybody off the hook. It’s not just the toxic men who prey on vulnerable women who come in for scrutiny.

She also turns her attention to the societal mechanisms that enable rape culture and the complicity of women.

“I think it’s just a completely cultural thing so it’s looking at what happens when the balance has been tilted for so long, so instinctiv­ely, so subconscio­usly, to believing men,” she says.

“Of course there are women who participat­e in this culture or who back it up, but it’s also important to say that their complicity is often because of their own experience­s and their own trauma.

“I think it’s a very different type of complicity when it’s something you’ve had to do just to survive yourself.”

 ??  ?? Carey Mulligan stars as Cassie Thomas, a former medical student whose life was derailed following the rape of her friend
Carey Mulligan stars as Cassie Thomas, a former medical student whose life was derailed following the rape of her friend

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