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But, even as I say that, it might be a very appropriate date movie.
The debut film of Emerald Fennell, showrunner for the second season of "Killing Eve," is a black comedy fueled by rage, inspired by the sort of activity exemplified by the #MeToo movement, more so for the systematic ignorance that was exposed by it, rather than by any surprises that there is existence of sexual exploitation in the name of unequal power dynamics. It's an old story to women. What was new was that it would be called out, that what had been hushed up for so long would be made an open secret, and that, if there was any sort of justice, there would be consequences for it. Payback is a bitch, but the ones using it aren't.
It's a seizing of power that was assumed wasn't there, not unlike the 1969 Stonewall uprising when gays decided they'd had enough oppression and would not be relegated to the shadows of shame, and once they'd seen the light, saw, too, that they were disarming the very weapons used against them. That is the destruction of the fantasy of power. For power can only live up to its definition if it is agreed to by both parties: the ones inflicting it, and the ones subjected to it. Without that common ground, it does not exist. "No" is a very powerful and forthright tool against it, but only when it is backed up by resolute action.
Cassandra Thomas (Carey Mulligan) has an off-beat dating ritual. She'll go, unaccompanied, to bars and as the evening progresses, alone and drunk, she'll attract the attention of the leering lounge-lizards, hunting in packs. As in Nature, they'll figure out the weakest prey and go in for the kill. Cassandra is easy pickings. We see her, arms out-flung, steadying herself between the headrests of naugahyde couches, when the most aggressive of the pack (Adam Brody) approaches her and takes a charitable stance in her situation. She's obviously in a bad way—she's alone, vulnerable, and three sheets to the wind. He's a good guy and offers to take her home; a knight in shining intentions. He helps her navigate the stairs and into an Uber, and—as long as they're on the way to her place—why don't they stop at his for a little night-cap, hair of the dog?
When "Mr. Nice Guy" gets her behind closed doors, his intentions of getting her home have completely changed, and instead offers her some cumquat liqueur (has there ever been a more ludicrously suggestive-sounding booze?) which she gasps is "terrible," he kisses her—to which she does not respond...at...all—but when she suggests she needs to lie down, he's only too helpful. She's conked out, and right at the point he's taking down her knickers, her eyes pop open, she sits up, looks him right in the eye and says "Hey! What're you doin'?" He can only stammer that she seems more than sober. "I said...'Hey! What're you DOIN'!?"
Bait...and switch.
Run title sequence...set to "It's Rainin' Men."
Cassie, it seems, has been doing this a lot. She's 30 years old, still living in her old bedroom at her folks' (Clancy Brown, Jennifer Coolidge). She has a dead-end job at a coffee-shop and has no intention...actually has no interest...in moving out or moving on. She knows she's stuck—or rather is choosing to be stuck—and the only signs of life in her are her snarky sense of humor and her clubbing activities, which are never violent, but more concerned with teaching self-proclaiming "nice guys" that they're actually misogynistic date-rapists taking advantage of low-hanging fruit.* She's telling these opportunistic letch's that they're assholes. And she's been doing it...a lot.
Maybe for six years. We're looking at obsession, and with that knowledge, a visual joke of Cassie opening her notebook and marking down another notch—among hundreds—at first gasp is a laugh, but on second thought is troubling. Why is she this way? Sure, there's sympathy when she badgers the next guy "We've got a connection? What do I do for a living? What are my interests? What's my NAME?" But, what's the motivation besides an anti-misogyny mission. Is she trying to overthrow a paternalistic power-structure one guy at a time?
We get a little bit of her history when a guy walks into the coffee shop and recognizes her—they went to med-school together. Now, he's a pediatrician and she's...well, she's working in a coffee shop and spitting into his coffee because she dropped out of med-school (even though she was at the top of her class). He asks her out, but she re-buffs him—even though he knowingly drinks the coffee. He comes in again, and he's a genuinely nice guy. They have coffee. They have lunch. They go to a movie. They pass his place and he asks if she wants to go up for....and no. She refuses. Adamantly. He apologizes. She says it's not him, it's her. But she kicks a garbage can in frustration. All alike.At this point, anything further as far as description will be full of spoilers. But, one can speak in general terms that her encounter with a former school-mate sets off a more specific level of activity, laser-focusing her ambitions to address the past, while also meting out some revenge-lessons to both men and women (she's an equal-complicity judge and jury—as the old Monty Python line goes "she's cruel...but fair!"). No matter the righteousness behind her actions, though, there is the persistent uncomfortableness of them and the fear that she will cross the line—although, any permanent damage she does is to complacency.
It does walk the tightrope, though, and leaves the audience there, as well, slightly off-balance. Fennell is as fearless, challenging comfort-zones, layering the soundtrack with sexualized songs (that contextualize the atmosphere of a predatory and demarcated culture) and pertinent classical pieces—there's also a couple of pointed references to The Night of the Hunter. If the film has a weakness, it might be her use of religious imagery, which she sneaks in subtly, but often enough that you notice, casting Cassie as a Joan of "Arc-hetype," intensifying the risk as she goes off to do battle in a good cause, even if that cause might abandon her. One line hits home hard: one of her victim bleats "It's every man's worst nightmare, getting accused of something like that." She replies "Can you guess what every woman's worst nightmare is?"
Promising Young Woman gives you the same black-comic back-slap as Dr. Strangelove—of admiring the cleverness, but horrified at yourself for admiring it, not knowing whether to laugh or throw up. It's a comic tragedy. It's a martyr's farce. Everybody gets their just desserts in the end, but sacrifices had to be made, so there's no inclination to pump your fist in the air in triumph. The world still sucks, the problems are still there, and the only consolation is that this little film is smart enough that it might make some impact, be they as small as notches in a notebook.
Yeah, maybe it would make a good date movie. The after-film discussion would certainly clue one in as to whether should be another.
* Fennell's casting, like everything in this movie is fascinating. For her collection of assholes she's hired guys who've been TV heart-throbs in the past and probably had their posters on a lot of teens' walls. It's just that little added texture of twisting the knife for any thoughts of complicity.
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