Tuesday, March 19, 2024

Poor Things

Director: Yorgos Lanthimos
Starring: Emma Stone, Mark Ruffalo, Willem Dafoe, Ramy Youssef, Christopher Abbott, Suzy Bemba, Jerrod Carmichael, Kathryn Hunter, Vicki Pepperdine, Margaret Qualley, Hanna Schygulla, Keeley Forsyth
Running Time: 142 min.
Rating: R

★★★ ½ (out of ★★★★)

It's hard to pinpoint the exact moment Yorgos Lanthimos's Poor Things pivots from an extremely weird, Frankenstein-inspired horror fantasy into something really special, but you'll know when it gets there. An oddly acquired taste that only grows stronger with each wacky, sensational development, in some ways it stylistically recalls the best of Terry Gilliam or Tim Burton before both got swallowed up by the system. But while still somehow managing to feel completely original, it's also a great twisted social satire, unironically navigating morally complicated waters to provide a thrilling, frequently hilarious experience. 

Given the MPAA's famously low tolerance for sex and nudity, Lanthimos's ability to escape with an 'R' rating is a feat in itself, as what starts as a Universal monster movie morphs into this globe trekking, fantastical comedy-adventure. With a steampunk infused look and imaginative production design, its atmosphere is unmatched by anything else in the genre, even as it's sometimes difficult to classify what that genre exactly is. It covers a lot of ground, all of which is navigated in Emma Stone's fearless performance. And while everyone's been talking about her willingness to go all out for the film's many graphic and controversial scenes, that's secondary to the other unexpected places she takes this unique character.

In Victorian London, an eccentric, facially disfigured surgeon named Godwin Baxter (Willem Dafoe) is looking after the childlike Bella (Stone), a young woman who while pregnant killed herself by jumping off a bridge. Now functioning with an infant's mind after Godwin replaces her brain with that of her unborn baby's, he recruits med student Max McCandles (Ramy Youssef) to track Bella's progress. But after falling in love with her and proposing marriage at Godwin's insistence, sleazy lawyer Duncan Wedderburn (Mark Ruffalo) arrives to finalize the contract.  

In the midst of exploring her own body and burgeoning sexual desires, Bella agrees to run off with Duncan, leaving Max behind, while Godwin moves on to another human project. But the mismatched couple's adventurous romp turns into a disaster when an increasingly curious Bella yearns to experience the world on her terms. As a whiny, insecure Duncan attempts to tighten the reigns and assert control over her, Bella must use the experience she's gained to decide between following this troublesome path or returning to the only life she knows. 

Based on Alasdair Gray's 1992 novel, this begins in classic horror territory, right down to an obsessively brilliant doctor's experiment and Robbie Ryan's stark black and white cinematography. Even before Godwin's pressured by Max for answers, it doesn't take long to figure out Bella is as much a test subject as the mutant animals found on the grounds. But it's Stone's mannerisms, physicality, line delivery and  distinct walk that reflects a child's mental and emotional inability to function within this adult woman's body. 

Lanthimos and Stone to make some bold choices that will immediately have viewers rooting Bella on, even in the cringiest of scenes. While Bella's decision to run away with Duncan is clearly a response to her character's sexual curiosity, it's the slimy suitor who seems more desperately in need of a brain and personality transplant, revealing himself a far bigger baby than Bella. But it's through his shenanigans that real change overtakes her, though not necessarily the kind Duncan wants. Stone may be remarkable but Ruffalo is perfect as her foil, bringing a quirky likeability to a drunken, debaucherous man child who's mentally unraveling at the mere thought of Bella openly questioning the rules of sophisticated society.

After a hugely entertaining dance number that serves as the first act's centerpiece, Bella and Duncan embark on a transformative cruise that Lanthimos fills with vibrant colors and jaw-dropping effects that resemble a dreamscape come to life. And there's a great interlude involving two passengers (played by Jerrod Carmichael and Hanna Schygulla) that further fuel Bella's philosophical curiosity and Duncan's eventual breakdown. 

When Bella winds up working in a brothel under the loony Madame Swiney (Kathryn Hunter), we already have ideas where this can go, at least until Tony McNamara's script subverts those expectations, using it as a thematic launching pad for Bella's final challenge. Going back to face the ailing father figure who deceived her and fiancé she abandoned, an even bigger obstacle awaits in reconciling the person she was with who she's now become.

By returning to the husband and life she had before leaping to her death, Bella attempts to flee from the men in her life, only to find herself back in a similar prison. General Alfie Blessington (Christopher Abbott) is just like the rest of them, but worse, leaving little wonder as to why "Victoria" felt there was no escape. With Bella now occupying the vessel that woman once resided, a new reality emerges when she takes matters into her own hands, utilizing the knowledge and experience she's gained to assert her independence. 

The victim of a medical procedure gone awry, or maybe exactly as planned, Bella navigates the world through different eyes, discovering it's just as cruel and unforgiving as when she first left it. Fully equipped with the tools to break those shackles, she gets the last laugh by shaping her own destiny. Brilliantly bizarre but hardly inaccessible, Lanthimos knows what he doing, endlessly imaginative in how he brings all these realistic sensibilities to a demented fairy tale. But everything comes down to Stone, who hits all the notes an actress possibly can in a single role, taking us on a wild, mind bending trip that isn't easy to shake.                                         

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