The Guardian (USA)

Cruella review – De Vil wears Prada in outrageous punk prequel

- Peter Bradshaw

Kindly step back and make way for a sensationa­l couple of Emmas: Stone and Thompson. Together, they are the highly strung dysfunctio­nal doubleact that post-lockdown cinema didn’t know it needed.

There’s an unexpected­ly huge amount of old-fashioned fun to be had in Disney’s spectacula­r new originmyth story from screenwrit­ers Aline Brosh McKenna, Kelly Marcel and Steve Zissis, prebooting Cruella de Vil, the wicked dognapper from One Hundred and One Dalmatians. She is now an icily supercool supervilla­in, and Stone gives it everything she’s got – which is a considerab­le amount – as Estella, a young orphan girl with a genetic quirk of black-and-white hair. I was hoping for some Susan Sontag gags, but you can’t have everything. She grows up in glamrock London of the mid-1970s, a world of Izal loo paper, Ford Anglia police cars and Golden Wonder crisps, living in a Faginesque thieves’ lair presided over by two dodgy scallywags, Jasper (Joel Fry) and Horace (Paul Walter Hauser), who took her in when she was a stroppy homeless waif and schooled her in the ways of thievery.

And Thompson gives it everything’s she’s got – which is a considerab­le amount, and then some – as an imperious fashion designer called the Baroness with a prestige outlet at Liberty’s department store in London’s stately West End. Young Estella idolises this aristocrat of couture because she wants to be a fashionist­a just like her. So when supportive Jasper and Horace fake her a CV, claiming that she played polo with Prince Charles, Estella nabs a Cruellade-Vil-wears-Prada

apprentice­ship with this grande dame. But then she is consumed with a need to destroy her haughty mentor, to reinvent herself as a punk-genius brand-named “Cruella”; it’s all got something to do with Estella’s poor, well-meaning mum, played by Emily Beecham, and the Baroness’s ferocious three Dalmatians to which Estella takes a dislike.

It’s all extremely entertaini­ng, although I do have to say that in these snowflakey days of emotional correctnes­s and respect for animals, this movie rather fudges the whole question of Cruella actually wanting, now or in the future, to kill Dalamatian­s for their skins. Maybe there’s a bit too much Hannibal Lecter energy, because the film sidesteps and pirouettes around that bit of nastiness, which was a feature both of the 1961 animation and of course Dodie Smith’s 1956 novel. You’ll have to hang on for the postcredit­s sting by the way, but that just makes the animal “cruelty” in Cruella even more puzzling by implicatio­n.

But what a lavish display, with repeated jukebox slams on the soundtrack keeping the movie’s bloodsugar levels high, although they didn’t use a certain Michael Jackson track which surely would have been perfect for a Dalmatians-themed film. The big screen is surely the place to marvel at the film’s digital recreation of London in the mid-70s, with top-notch work from costume designer Jenny Beavan and production designer Fiona Crombie, who lay on the outrageous accoutreme­nts with a trowel. There are times when Cruella’s young womanhood is a mixture of Sleeping Beauty and Heath Ledger’s Joker.

Nowadays, there is hardly a classic female villain who hasn’t been reinvented or origin-mythed on a quasi-feminist basis. (Maybe the three witches in Macbeth should get this treatment, starring Millie Bobby Brown, Elle Fanning and Kirby Howell-Baptiste – who’s actually in this film, playing Estella’s smart mate, Anita.) But the politics of Cruella de Vil are more generation­al than sexual. She wants to be like her role-model heroine and then wipe her out. It’s not the dog’s skin Cruella wants to rip off and wear, it’s the Baroness’s. She wants to inhabit and destroy.

• Cruella is released on 28 May in cinemas and on Disney+.

 ??  ?? Aristocrat of couture ... Emma Thompson in Cruella. Photograph: Laurie Spar
Aristocrat of couture ... Emma Thompson in Cruella. Photograph: Laurie Spar
 ??  ?? Dog eat dog ... Emma Stone in Cruella. Photograph: Disney
Dog eat dog ... Emma Stone in Cruella. Photograph: Disney

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