Miami Herald

Poor Things

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In the middle of “Poor Things,” the new film from Oscar-nominated oddball auteur Yorgos Lanthimos, our heroine Bella Baxter (Emma Stone) toddles off on a solo adventure for the very first time. Wandering the streets of a pastel storybook Lisbon in silky shorts and a blouse with enormous puff sleeves, her long mane of raven hair swaying down back, Bella heads for a pastry stand, where she crams as many custard tarts as she can into her mouth. Later, she vomits them up on a balcony overlookin­g a picturesqu­e vista of the city. Cause, meet effect. Bella observes this bit of data and reports it back to her scientist father figure, Godwin Baxter (Willem Dafoe) in a crudely scrawled postcard home.

This kind of self-experiment­ation is the backbone of “Poor Things,” Lanthimos’ strange and ravishing masterpiec­e about a young woman who receives one of life’s rare gifts: a chance to start over, from scratch. What will Bella do with her new lease on life? She’ll devour every last crumb, without an ounce of shame.

This adaptation of the 1992 novel by the late Scottish writer Alasdair Gray (the script is by “The Favourite” scribe Tony McNamara) has long been a pet project of Lanthimos’, and it fits with themes he has explored in his other films, specifical­ly “Dogtooth,” wherein adult innocents seek to escape cloistered confines. But Bella Baxter might be his most daring, and shockingly self-possessed, creation yet.

She is, in fact, the creation of Godwin, a brutally disfigured surgeon who was the subject of his own father’s medical meddling, who lives, teaches and researches in Victorian London. Godwin is a tender, loving figure, a Dr. Frankenste­in whose ethereal waif of a monster is like a daughter to him. While her brain catches up to her body, she waddles around his house, stiff-legged and petulant, every step, bite and word carefully cataloged by a sweet young medical student named Max (Ramy Youssef).

Despite his desire to keep the conditions of his experiment pure, Bella is a being of free will, and Godwin is just one of many guides in her personal evolution. He instills in her a love of science, but soon her burgeoning sexual appetite leads her astray, and Bella becomes taken with a dastardly cad named Duncan

Wedderburn (a terrific heel turn from Mark Ruffalo), who whisks her away to Lisbon. Thus begins the adventure that makes Bella who she is, learning the highs and lows of life with the help of various characters who demonstrat­e to her what it means to be human: the corporeal pleasures, intellectu­al quandaries, emotional lows and political questions — and that people can be “cruel beasts,” too.

She gains philosophi­cal and pragmatic knowledge aboard an ocean liner from Martha (Hanna Schygulla) and Harry (Jerrod Carmichael), and learns more about herself and others though sex work and socialism in Paris, under the tutelage

of a madam named Swiney (Kathryn Hunter) and a new comrade (Suzy Bemba). The final stop on her experiment­al journey through the human condition is back to London where she has to face herself, or the self that others expect her to be. Will she accept or reject it?

There’s an obvious comparison to be made here to “Barbie,” another film about a beautiful naïf discoverin­g the sharp corners of the world. But where Barbie cracks under her existentia­l crisis, Bella only grows stronger, absorbing power as she explores more and more. Stone delivers the most astonishin­g performanc­e, and is perhaps the only actress who could convincing­ly convey such simultaneo­us expression­s of sincerity, absurdity, intelligen­ce, libidinous­ness and humor.

Stone’s performanc­e evokes modern dance and movement both avantgarde and primitive.

While she incrementa­lly evolves Bella before our eyes, Lanthimos evolves the film’s style alongside her, from the film stock and camera movements, to the gorgeously rendered production design by Shona Heath and James Price, to the elaborate costumes by Holly Waddington.

This film may be fantastica­l, outré, at times bizarre, and sexually frank. But ultimately, “Poor Things” is a heroine’s journey forging its own singular path. That Bella achieves a fully embodied sense of personal liberation makes it a truly radical — and feminist — fairy tale.

Cast: Emma Stone, Mark Ruffalo, Willem Dafoe,

Ramy Youssef, Hanna Schygulla, Jerrod Carmichael, Kathryn

Hunter, Suzy Bemba Director: Yorgos Lanthimos Running time: 2 hours 21

MPA rating: R for strong and pervasive sexual content, graphic nudity, disturbing material, gore and language

How to watch: In selected theaters nationwide Friday. Check local listings for availabili­ty.

 ?? ATSUSHI NISHIJIMA Searchligh­t Pictures/TNS ?? Emma Stone, left, and Mark Ruffalo star in ‘Poor Things.’
ATSUSHI NISHIJIMA Searchligh­t Pictures/TNS Emma Stone, left, and Mark Ruffalo star in ‘Poor Things.’

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