Sunday, March 3, 2019

Greta

Last night I went to see a late night screening of Greta because I was really intrigued by the trailer.  I love a good psychological thriller but, unfortunately, this movie is not that.  Frances McCullen (Chloe Grace Moretz) finds an expensive handbag on the subway and decides to return it to its owner who turns out to be Greta (Isabelle Huppert), a middle-aged French woman who gives piano lessons in her home.  Having recently lost her mother, Frances befriends the lonely woman who becomes a sort of surrogate mother to her.  When Frances finds out a disturbing secret about Greta, she tries to end the relationship.  However, Greta won't let the friendship end and begins stalking Frances, becoming more and more aggressive until she eventually kidnaps Frances.  Two-thirds of this movie is really good.  It is intense and full of suspense.  Greta is such a fascinating character because at first she is very sympathetic as a lonely woman looking for a friend but then she becomes more and more menacing as her motivation is revealed.  The scenes between Greta and Frances are fraught with tension, especially when Greta visits the restaurant where Frances works, and both Huppert and Moretz give great performances.  Huppert is suitably creepy as the villain and Moretz really makes us feel Frances' desperation.  Regrettably, the final act descends into the absurd as a series of underdeveloped secondary characters enter the action to try and save Frances.  There is one scene in particular, when a private detective (Stephen Rea) visits Greta, that is so absolutely bonkers that I laughed out loud because I couldn't believe what I was seeing.  Apparently, all of the acting budget was spent on Huppert and Moretz because every other actor in this movie is abysmal, especially Maika Monroe who plays Frances' roommate.  Finally, I found the final resolution to be be very campy, and not in a good way, which would have been fine had it been marketed as a B-movie rather than a spine-tingling thriller.  I was quite disappointed because, like so many movies I have seen this year (go here and here), it could have been so good if it had kept its focus on the dynamic between the two main characters.  Give this a miss.

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