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Ramy Youssef and Emma Stone in POOR THINGS. Photo by Yorgos Lanthimos. Courtesy of Searchlight Pictures.  2023 Searchlight Pictures All Rights Reserved.

(Yorgos Lanthimos/Searchlight Pictures)

Poor Things is Emma Stone and director Yorgos Lanthimosrichest work to date

Dec. 7, 2023

There comes a moment when Poor Things, a gloriously bonkers fairy tale from the director Yorgos Lanthimos, explodes from black-and-white into wild, ecstatic color. Bella Baxter played by a grinning, gasping, rutting, entirely astounding Emma Stone is having sex for the first time, and its an experience of purest Technicolorgasmic delirium. The abrupt shift in visual palette naturally evokes The Wizard of Oz, even if the circumstances decidedly do not: Think of it as the R-rated art-house equivalent of Dorothy opening the door to Oz for the first time, though this particular Dorothy might as well be singing her own bizarre riff on If I Only Had a Brain.

Bella, as we learn early on, is the beneficiary of the worlds first mother-daughter cranial transplant, a procedure performed by a sweetly deranged, unsubtly named scientist, Dr. Godwin Baxter. (Hes played by Willem Dafoe, emoting beautifully through a faceful of prosthetic scars.) The reasons for this operation are too elaborate and nonsensical to give away here; suffice to say that, with the slash of a scalpel, a sizzle of electricity and a heavy debt to Mary Shelley, Bella now has a babys brain and a dead womans reanimated body a mismatch that Stone conveys with her stumbling gait, underdeveloped speech and a look of childlike anarchy in her sharp, searching eyes. Bella is her own mother and her own daughter, which is to say shes both and shes neither. Shes a monstrosity and a marvel, and no less than the movie that spawned her, shes entirely sui generis.

Indeed, to a remarkably thorough degree, Bella

is

the movie. Its not just that Stones droll, playful, ferocious and febrile performance dominates almost every scene, or that

the severity of Bella’s countenance, with her piercing blue eyes, pale complexion and dark, Rapunzel-length hair, stays with you

for days afterward. Its more that the movie around Bella, brilliantly adapted by Tony McNamara from Alasdair Grays 1992 novel, feels like such a singular and unfiltered expression of her consciousness. Lanthimos may have cobbled together a rambunctious psychosexual odyssey from many Frankensteinian parts a little Alice in Wonderland, a dash of Metropolis, a soupon of Voltaire by way of the Marquis de Sade but he and his skilled collaborators have marshaled them into a remarkably coherent and purposeful vision.

Shona Heath and James Prices elaborate production design, plopping down a candy-colored futuristic theme park on various corners of 19th century Europe, captures the otherworldly strangeness of what Bella sees. Robbie Ryans 35mm cinematography, deploying irises, fish-eye lenses and exploratory tracking shots, suggests the disorientation and curiosity with which she sees it. Holly Waddingtons costumes, mashing together periods and styles, approximate the anything-but-seamless jumble of Bellas identities,

as does

her suggestive deployment of fleshy-looking folds and ruffles.

And Jerskin Fendrixs unruly, dissonant score, working in context with Johnnie Burns womblike soundscape, plays like something piped in directly from Bellas transplanted psyche. In a way, Fendrixs compositions moving from the wry, picaresque strings of Bellas early years to a convulsive coming-of-age synth-ony tell the story as directly as any of McNamaras words.

Even so, those words provide their own wickedly funny music, especially when spoken in Stones signature rasp (no more mistakable for the British accent she employs here, as she did in Lanthimos The Favourite). When we first meet Bella in Victorian London, shes barely verbal, prone to communicating by smacking, punching and flinging food at people. Taking most of the abuse is Godwins devoted young assistant, Max McCandles (Ramy Youssef), who observes Bella and soon becomes hopelessly smitten with her. He becomes more enamored still as Bellas brain development accelerates to keep pace with her body, a strain we hear reflected in her inventively circuitous, concussed-Jane-Austen-heroine syntax: Your sad face makes me discover angry feelings for you. The cruel just bubbles up in me. Now, I must lie down and you must lie down on top of me and do more furious jumping.

That last phrase is one of several carnal euphemisms sprinkled throughout McNamaras bracingly lewd, profanity-laced script. Bella becomes a veritable thesaurus of filth from the moment she discovers sexual pleasure, first exploring her adult body with childlike curiosity and then embarking on a passionate fling with a dandyish neer-do-well named Duncan Wedderburn (a hilariously lascivious Mark Ruffalo). Its Duncan who spirits her away, taking her on a decadent tour of Lisbon and then on a European boat cruise, all the while urging Bella to gorge herself on pastries, oysters and his own all-too-eager body. How old is Bella, mentally, when the

frenzied

Kama Sutra montages kick in? Its troublingly difficult to say. In Lanthimos world, transgressive sex scenes plus sadistic power games, anachronistic dance

numbers

and senseless acts of animal cruelty more or less come with the terrain.

The sex scenes between Bella and Duncan and between Bella and the various partners she takes during an extended Parisian jaunt may occupy only a few of the movies 141 minutes, but they have unsurprisingly dominated the buzz around Poor Things since it premiered (and won the top prize) at the Venice International Film Festival this past fall. The disproportionate attention certainly proves one of the movies points, namely that sex can be fun (Why do people not do this all the time? Bella marvels) and also, for that reason, a dangerously all-consuming distraction.

But Lanthimos, who favors a dryly clinical view of human relations, isnt (only) interested in art-house titillation. Even when he fills the screen with whips and chains, bared breasts and pendulous phalluses, the overriding atmosphere is one of absurdity rather than ecstasy. And Bella, whos inherited a measure of Godwins analytical detachment, registers enough of that absurdity to move decisively past it to question what, if anything, the world has to offer beyond indulgences like rich sweets, fabulous clothes and bursts of erotic release. Bellas body may draw the cameras gaze, but the evolution of her mind and the awakening of her

conscience

is this movies chief preoccupation and, finally, its most meaningful source of beauty.

She starts asking questions, reading Emerson and forging friendships, notably with two fellow travelers who challenge her assumptions and encourage her liberation. (Theyre played by an amusingly unctuous Jerrod Carmichael and, in the movies most delightful casting non sequitur, the veteran German actress Hanna Schygulla.) As her horizons expand, Bella learns about the existence of pain and suffering, cynicism and compassion, the problems of socialism and the horrors of capitalism. Mostly, too, she learns that men are awful, with Ruffalos jealous, petulant Duncan serving as an obvious Exhibit A, while a hyper-authoritarian general played by Christopher Abbott serves as Exhibits B through Z. Even Godwin and Max, relatively benign overseers whose fondness for Bella is never in doubt, make their attempts to

subjugate

her perhaps Godwin most of all, insofar as he brings Bella into being through an act of violence against a womans body.

If Godwin would defend his actions on scientific grounds, its a choice that unmistakably aligns him with Lanthimos, who has long approached his characters in the manner of a researcher conducting an elaborate psychosocial experiment. Thats why The Favourite behaved less like a gussied-up English period drama than a rigorous, semi-sadistic case study in aristocratic misbehavior, and why The Lobster imposed such blatantly allegorical rules on its sendup of socially proscribed monogamy. Dogtooth, an early Lanthimos tour de force that this movie seems

strikingly

in conversation with, was a closely observed study of entrapment that ended with a possibly futile gesture of liberation.

In Poor Things, liberation sets in gratifyingly early, and Lanthimos follows it through to its strange, thrilling, not-at-all-logical conclusion. Whether this makes the movie an innately feminist work or, as some detractors have claimed, a superficial girlboss narrative is certainly open to debate. One might just as easily read the movie as a kind of secular Nude Testament parable, with Bella cast as Godwins prodigal daughter or as a

perhaps a mostun-

family-

un

friendly companion work to Barbie, in which a womans doll-like naivet becomes a surprisingly effective weapon against the patriarchy. It takes a childs untainted vision and uncoached honesty to call out the stupidity of the existing social order, just as it also takes a womans strength to do something about it. Or, as Bella herself puts it with a mix of childish whimsy and grown-up wisdom:

It is only the way it is until we discover the new way it is.

Even so, Lanthimos and Stone shrewdly sidestep any lone interpretation by making Bella too interesting too impulsive, too thoughtful, too cruel, too kind and finally too damn hilarious to be reduced to an easy symbol of female empowerment or an avatar of post-#MeToo resistance. (A woman plotting her course to freedom

. H h

ow delightful, a character mutters with unmistakable meta-sarcasm.) Its become a clich to praise a filmmaker for loving his characters, as if doing so made said characters worthier of our interest, or if humanism were an inherent artistic virtue. But Lanthimos clearly loves Bella Baxter to pieces, which is why he refuses to flatten her comic dimensions or sell her out: The fact that shes as unnervingly, unpredictably funny by movies end as she is at the beginning is proof of just how seriously he takes her.

Bella isnt the first

personcharacter

in a Lanthimos movie to hunger for freedom and experience (in a way, they all do), but theres something remarkable about the way her sense of liberation merges with the directors own. I think thats why Poor Things feels as exuberant as it does, why a movie with so much unadulterated weirdness, so many patently unnecessary surgical procedures and vivisectional sight gags

,

is also its directors most

joyously

unbound work. Its heart is forever in the right place, even when its brains are not.

Poor ThingsRating: R, for strong and pervasive sexual content, graphic nudity, disturbing material, gore and languageRunning time: 2 hours, 21 minutesPlaying: Starts Friday at AMC Burbank 16; AMC Burbank Town Center 6; AMC the Grove 14; AMC Century City 15

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