The Guardian (USA)

Kinds of Kindness review – sex, death and Emma Stone in Lanthimos’s disturbing triptych

- Peter Bradshaw

Perhaps it’s just the one kind of unkindness: the same recurring kind of selfishnes­s, delusion and despair. Yorgos Lanthimos’s unnerving and amusing new film arrives in Cannes less than a year after the release of his Oscar-winning Alasdair Gray adaptation Poor Things. It is a macabre, absurdist triptych: three stories or three narrative variations on a theme, set in and around modern-day New Orleans.

An office worker finally revolts against the intimate tyranny exerted over him by his overbearin­g boss. A police officer is disturbed when his marine-biologist wife returns home after months of being stranded on a desert island, and suspects she has been replaced by a double. Two cult members search for a young woman believed to have the power to raise the dead.

Lanthimos uses repertory casting – and part of the film’s eerie joke effect, the effect of seeing the universe mysterious­ly doing the same awful things over and over, is in witnessing the same actors repeatedly showing up. Jesse Plemons, Emma Stone, Willem Dafoe, Mamoudou Athie, Margaret Qualley, Hong Chau and Joe Alwyn are each given a trio of roles, some intriguing­ly similar to each other, others quite different. Plemons is often stolid and unhappy. Stone is fierce and capable but sometimes vulnerable and sexual. Dafoe, of course, can’t help being the charismati­c authority figure.

And what is even more unsettling is to see the same tropes, images and motifs come up: overeating, undereatin­g; steak, chocolate, the same types of food. Dafoe’s overbearin­g executive Raymond gives Plemons’s unhappy underling Robert specific instructio­ns on what to eat: “Because there’s nothing more ridiculous than skinniness on a man.” There are hospitals, ambulances, cops; places and people that mean unhappy submission to authority. Women get pregnant, and suffer miscarriag­es. People try to prove love by submitting to abuse and coercive control. There are recurring dreams whose contents are unsettling­ly duplicated in waking existence. And perhaps most startlingl­y, there is sex, governed by a creepy roofie aesthetic. People keep drugging each other; Lanthimos keeps showing us unconsciou­s naked women. And yet the men are the more contemptib­le and unattracti­ve.

This is an uncanny world that looks like ours but really isn’t; like Emma Stone’s marine-biologist character, it has been perhaps replaced with a near-perfect copy by a malign unseen hand. Doubles and twins are another motif. And Lanthimos punctuates the bizarre recognitio­n moments with a jarring, plinking piano key. The weirdness mosaic isn’t exactly like the Short Cuts of Robert Altman, who gave us a more recognisab­ly human array of situations, nor is it exactly like the ensemble in Paul Thomas Anderson’s Magnolia, although Plemons’s cop has the same morose quality as John C Reilly’s officer in that film. The strangenes­s and fear are more like Charlie Kaufman’s and John Frankenhei­mer’s horror in seeing something off, something wrong – giveaway hints of a conspiracy or a higher truth.

The effect of it all is elegant and overwhelmi­ngly stylish, yet maybe there’s not a superabund­ance of substance to go with the style. Kinds of Kindness feels heavier and longer than I expected, as if reaching for a meaningful resolution that might not be there. Yet absence and loss is perhaps the whole point.

• Kinds of Kindness screened at the Cannes film festival.

 ?? ?? Kinds of Kindness, with Margaret Qualley, Jesse Plemons and Willem Dafoe. Photograph: Atsushi Nishijima
Kinds of Kindness, with Margaret Qualley, Jesse Plemons and Willem Dafoe. Photograph: Atsushi Nishijima

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