Chattanooga Times Free Press - ChattanoogaNow

‘Ready or Not’ too sardonic to be taken seriously as satire

- BY KATIE WALSH TRIBUNE NEWS SERVICE

Ready? Or not. The simple query that starts a game of hide-and-seek is a question that can turn eminently existentia­l when applied to marriage.

In “Ready or Not,” notso-blushing bride Grace (Samara Weaving) is more than ready to marry Alex (Mark O’Brien). But is she ready to face his stuffy, monied family, the scions of the Le Domas gaming fortune?

Set in the world of richies and rituals, this slick slasher flick hinges around a marital game night, a midnight initiation

‘Ready or Not’

› Rating: R for violence, bloody images, language throughout and some drug use

› Running time: 1 hour, 35 minutes every wannabe Le Domas has to endure. If the newbie pulls the hide-and-seek card, the family hunts them until death or dawn. It’s a blood pact they keep with the ghost of their benefactor, which they wholeheart­edly believe will keep their good fortune intact.

“Ready or Not” is “The Most Dangerous Game” with notes of “Rosemary’s Baby” and the sassy, snarky ’tude of “Heathers.” Grace is Veronica in a wedding dress: a street-smart and sarcastic smoker who has to outwit, outplay and outlast a bunch of privileged buffoons obsessed with status. They’re not croquet mallet-wielding mean girls, but rather her in-laws wielding antique pistols and crossbows, and the same whiff of class warfare is undeniable.

But the script, by Guy Busick and Ryan Murphy, errs a bit too far on the side of sardonic to be taken seriously as true social satire. Horror requires a certain amount of sincerity for the audience to fully buy in, and there’s hardly a trace in this incredibly ironic screenplay, which invites the audience to laugh rather than scream. Although it gestures at female empowermen­t with Grace as a thoroughly modern Final Girl and offers a unique spin on “off with their heads” for whiny 1-percenters, the heavy layers of irony both in script and performanc­e never allow the subversive ideas to emerge fully formed. Chuckling at female servants accidental­ly shot in the face just doesn’t jive with either of those implicated themes.

However, co-directors Matt Bettinelli-Olpin and Tyler Gillett direct the heck out of the script, maintainin­g the pace at a full rip, which papers over any character inconsiste­ncies or plot holes. The visual style is distinctiv­e and moody, giving way from a sun-bright wedding day to the queasy and claustroph­obic atmosphere inside the foreboding mansion. The color is desaturate­d and full of contrast, cast in an eerie turquoise pall, as if through a murky Instagram filter.

While the mocking tone mostly undermines any trenchant commentary, thanks to Weaving’s eye-rolling, primal-screaming, evil-giggling performanc­e, the strongest impression “Ready or Not” leaves is of the cathartic, transforma­tive female rage at the center of it all. The rage is what keeps Grace alive. The sprawling estate itself, a representa­tion of exclusiona­ry greed, rips at her flesh, and though bloodied and battered by this bloodsport, her sheer survival is her resistance against the gaping maws of the demented tradition. Ready or not, here she comes.

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