The Denver Post

Sudden danger in “Eileen”

- By Alissa Wilkinson

Exceptions exist, of course, but protagonis­ts in mainstream movies labeled feminist tend to fall along two lines. One is the endearing woman who has to break out of the cage she hadn’t even known she was in (think the girlbossin­g of “Barbie,” more or less). The other is the hot mess rom-com heroine, who is, as advertised, both super hot and an agent of abject chaos, her life and habits and relationsh­ips in perpetual ruins.

The pleasure of “Eileen” is that its titular protagonis­t is all of these and none of them: repellent, bitter, repressed and in search of liberation that arrives in a decidedly unsexy manner. In some ways the story is familiar — small-town girl with a terrible life yearns to break free, and meets someone who represents that freedom — but it’s all filtered through a dirty mirror, a noir with shmutz rubbed onto the lens. Eileen’s unpleasant­ness is also her appeal; this girl certainly is no boss, she’s incapable of rousing speeches, and she’s never going to mutate into a heroine. She is, in other words, familiar.

The movie she’s in is a psychosexu­al thriller, kind of. Ottessa Moshfegh, along with Luke Goebel, adapted Moshfegh’s 2015 novel into a screenplay that’s relatively faithful to the original, but with a few key twists that ensure tension for viewers who’ve read the book. Yet the outlines remain the same: It is the early 1960s, and Eileen Dunlop (Thomasin Mckenzie) lives with her alcoholic ex-cop father in some gray, nameless New England town. Eileen’s clerical job at the local boys’ correction­al center is stultifyin­g and upsetting, or it would be if Eileen, who is in her mid-20s, could muster the ability to be upset anymore. (“Everyone’s kinda angry here — it’s Massachuse­tts,” she tells someone.)

One day right before Christmas, the new prison counselor turns up, a pulled-together platinum blonde named Rebecca (Anne Hathaway) who seems to have floated in from another dimension. She’s educated, she jokes with the staff and

Thomasin Mckenzie, right, with Anne Hathaway in “Eileen.”

she dresses in a way that emphasizes her curves. Rebecca is comfortabl­e in the world in a way Eileen finds magnetizin­g. Swiftly, Rebecca becomes her center of gravity, the encapsulat­ion of her dreams. It’s the sort of infatuatio­n a teenager might develop, somewhere between wanting a person and wanting to be a person, but with Rebecca around, Eileen’s bloodless life is injected with sudden fire, and danger, too.

Mckenzie’s accent is a bit wobblier than Hathaway’s, but once you’re over that hump, the pair are thrilling together. Mckenzie plays Eileen as a wideeyed girl in arrested developmen­t who might have been an ingénue if she’d ever had a moment to sparkle. Instead her flat affect, which on someone else might be mysterious and intriguing, turns her invisible. Eileen’s own father tells her, in a moment of uneasily companiona­ble boozy candor, that there are people in the world who live like they’re “in a movie,” the “ones making moves,” but that Eileen is the other kind of person: “Easy. Take a penny, leave a penny. That’s you, Eileen. You’re one of them.”

So Rebecca, whom Eileen’s father would probably term a “dame” (or maybe a “hussy”), comes like a bolt from the frigid blue, although more sophistica­ted eyes than Eileen’s can detect some kind of performati­vity in her self-presentati­on. She is, after all, a female Harvard graduate (not, she emphasizes, Radcliffe) in early ‘60s New England. She’s been educated with men and now works in a prison for boys and seems perfectly comfortabl­e taunting men in a dive bar. She’s developed a kind of bombshell casing, for reasons unknown but easy to

EILEEN

Rated:

Running time: 97 minutes Where: in theaters

Rguess at. Hathaway’s performanc­e is pure Hollywood siren wrapped in a wool skirt suit. What she is hiding, her motivation­s — that’s all opaque, and despite a veneer of vulnerabil­ity, there’s something just a little seedy about her.

These sorts of women, off-putting and maddeningl­y erratic, tied to the physical in a way that makes others uneasy, are familiar territory for Moshfegh. She’s perhaps best known for her 2018 novel “My Year of Rest and Relaxation,” about a young woman who in response to grief develops an addiction to sleeping pills and their accompanyi­ng twilight state. In Moshfegh’s imaginatio­n, emotional states are signaled by bodily obsessions viewed with disapprova­l in polite society. For Eileen, this manifests in compulsive behavior: masturbati­ng while spying on a couple in a car, only to stuff snow down her tights to stifle the impulse, or chewing candies and spitting them back out by the bowlful, in an attempt to control her body size. (In the novel, she’s also scatologic­ally fixated, downing laxatives and frequently commenting on fecal matters; the film, perhaps necessaril­y, carves this part away.)

But the story is also a perfect pairing for its director, William Oldroyd, whose previous film, the 2017 thriller “Lady Macbeth,” introduced Florence Pugh to the world. Oldroyd’s cold but keen eye for women pushed to the edge of a nervous breakdown by boorish, violent men meets rich ground here.

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