Saturday, December 23, 2023

Poor Things

The second movie in my double feature at the Broadway last night was Poor Things. I am a huge fan of Yorgos Lanthimos and I had heard a lot of intriguing discourse about this movie (both good and bad) so I was beyond excited to see it.  I absolutely loved this dark and twisted masterpiece!  Victoria Blessington (Emma Stone), a pregnant woman in Victorian England, commits suicide by jumping off a bridge.  A brilliant but disfigured surgeon named Dr. Godwin Baxter (Willem Dafoe), who was experimented upon by his father, discovers her body and reanimates her by transplanting the brain of her unborn baby into her body.  He names her Bella Baxter and hires Max McCandles (Ramy Youssef), one of his medical students, to record the data as her intellect develops rapidly.  Max falls in love with her and she agrees to marry him but she wants a grand adventure first.  She learns about physical pleasure and other forms of hedonism (my favorite is when she dances with wild abandon) from a feckless lawyer named Duncan Wedderburn (Mark Ruffalo) while in Portugal.  She learns about philosophy and compassion for the the suffering in the world from fellow passengers Martha Von Kurtzroc (Hanna Schygulla) and Harry Astley (Jerrod Carmichael) while on a cruise ship.  She learns about resourcefulness and socialism from Madame Swiney (Kathryn Hunter) and a prostitute named Toinette (Suzy Bemba) while working in a brothel in Paris.  She learns the truth about her origins from Victoria's husband Alfie Blessington (Christopher Abbott) when she returns to London and finally discovers her purpose when she reunites with Dr. Baxter and McCandles.  I loved the themes of rebirth, self-discovery, transformation, liberation, and empowerment and I know that I will be thinking about this movie for quite some time.  Stone gives a brilliant and fearless performance and I found her disjointed movements, mannerisms, and facial expressions as Bella develops to be so much fun to watch.  Dafoe, Ruffalo, Youssef, and Abbott are also outstanding and it was fascinating to see the different ways in which they portray their need to control Bella (Ruffalo is hilarious).  The production design is gorgeous and I loved all of the steampunk elements, especially the modes of transportation.  The costumes are also fantastic and I particularly enjoyed how they change as Bella develops and how they represent both the Victorian aesthetic but also freedom from the societal norms of that time.  I enjoyed this so much and so did my audience because they applauded at the end!  I highly recommend this to fans of Lanthimos and black comedies but it is extremely explicit so keep that in mind when deciding to see it.

Note:  I thought that Barbie had a lock on all of the production design and costume awards this season but I think Poor Things will give it some serious competition!

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