Sunday, November 26, 2023

Saltburn

The second movie in my double feature at the Broadway yesterday was Saltburn.  I was so excited to see this and it definitely did not disappoint!  Oliver Quick (Barry Keoghan) is a scholarship student at Oxford who struggles to fit in with his wealthier classmates.  He attracts the attention of the popular and aristocratic Felix Catton (Jacob Elordi) when he loans him his bicycle but gains his sympathy by describing his traumatic childhood with an alcoholic mother as well as the recent death of his father.  He is eventually invited to Saltburn, the vast estate owned by Felix's family, where he ingratiates himself to his parents Sir James (Richard E. Grant) and Lady Elspeth (Rosamund Pike) and his sister Venetia (Alison Oliver) but alienates his cousin Farleigh (Archie Madekwe) who is jealous of the attention lavished on him.  Oliver continues his machinations until the current guest, Poor Dear Pamela (Carey Mulligan), is sent packing and he enjoys a summer of excess and depravity until his obsession becomes malevolent.  This is both highly amusing (there were hoots of laughter in my screening) and provocative (there was also a lot of nervous giggling) and I loved it!  Keoghan is incredibly disturbing and you cannot look away as Oliver engages in one debauched act after another (there is an especially titillating scene involving a bathtub), Elordi is so charming and charismatic that it is easy to see why Felix would become the object of a powerful obsession, and Pike is an absolute hoot as the vacuous Elspeth.  However, Madekwe is absolutely brilliant because Farleigh is unlikable but yet strangely sympathetic as someone who is accepted but doesn't really belong and he nails this complexity with a highly nuanced performance.  I loved all of the elaborately composed shots, especially all of the reflections in ordinary objects because they show how much Oliver wants to belong to Saltburn, the opulent production design, and the killer (pun intended) soundtrack.  This features some interesting commentary on the class system but I appreciate the style with which it is presented a lot more!  There are some structural issues (I don't think the final recapitulation is necessary because the twist has been obvious all along) but this is wildly entertaining and I highly recommend it to fans of black comedies. 

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