Showing posts with label Florence Pugh. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Florence Pugh. Show all posts

Sunday, 11 May 2025

Movie Review: Midsommar (2019)


Genre: Horror  
Director: Ari Aster  
Starring: Florence Pugh, Jack Reynor, Will Poulter  
Running Time: 147 minutes  

Synopsis: Dani (Florence Pugh) loses her parents and sister in shocking circumstances, straining her relationship with boyfriend Christian (Jack Reynor). Nevertheless the couple accept an invitation from Christian's friend Pelle to visit his home community in rural Sweden in time for a midsummer festival. Upon arrival the tension between Dani and Christian intensifies as they dabble in hallucinogenics and witness the increasingly troubling rituals of an isolated pagan community.

What Works Well: The opening pre-credit sequence leading to the demise of Dani's family is excellent, drawing on Florence Pugh's full range as she navigates uncertainty, loss, grief, disorientation, and doubt. The scenes in Sweden benefit from occasionally interesting cinematography. 

What Does Not Work As Well: Languid pacing, shallow character definitions, minimal plot points, endless scenes of staring, chanting, dancing, and hollering, and the absence of suspense decimate momentum. Writer and director Ari Aster leans heavily on a couple of shocking moments and some gore, both quite insufficient to justify a bloated running time that is a good one hour longer than necessary.

Key Quote:
Pelle (to Dani, about Christian): He's my good friend and I like him, but... Dani, do you feel held by him? Does he feel like home to you?



All Ace Black Movie Blog reviews are here.

Sunday, 4 May 2025

Movie Review: Fighting With My Family (2019)


Genre: Sports Biography  
Director: Stephen Merchant  
Starring: Florence Pugh, Lena Headey, Vince Vaughn, Nick Frost, Dwayne Johnson  
Running Time: 108 minutes  

Synopsis: In Norwich, England, working class couple Patrick and Julia (Nick Frost and Lena Headey) run a local semi-pro wrestling circuit featuring their teenaged children Zak and Raya (Jack Lowden and Florence Pugh). The family dreams of getting noticed by the World Wrestling Entertainment, and Zak and Raya are finally given an opportunity to audition in London. But WWE recruiter and coach Hutch (Vince Vaughn) only selects Raya for further training, and she jets off to Florida leaving Zak resentful. Raya adopts the stage name Paige as she attempts to qualify for the WWE, but she faces numerous challenges and an increasingly strained relationship with her family back home.

What Works Well: Plenty of heart ensures a warm glow in this biography of professional wrestler Paige, with a focus on humble roots and an unlikely path to stardom. The hardscrabble family background features sports-as-salvation from addictions and incarceration, with love, support, ambition, and humour fueling Paige's rise. She still has a lot to learn once her WWE training starts, and Florence Pugh invests in Paige's complex personal growth as she meets competitors from other backgrounds and navigates her brother's doldrums. Vince Vaughn builds a steady bridge between Norwich and glamour, and Dwayne Johnson enjoys a couple of prolonged scenes as himself. 

What Does Not Work As Well: The rags-to-riches story arc offers few surprises, leading to a high-volume final act filled with triumphalism, lacking subtlety, and compromised by a never-before-seen opponent.

Key Quote:
Raya (to Coach Hutch): You didn't cut me and I didn't quit.



All Ace Black Movie Blog Reviews are here.

Monday, 1 July 2024

Movie Review: The Wonder (2022)


Genre: Drama  
Director: Sebastian Lelio  
Starring: Florence Pugh, Tom Burke, Kila Lord Cassidy  
Running Time: 103 minutes  

Synopsis: It's the 1860s, and English nurse Elizabeth Wright (Florence Pugh) accepts a two-week assignment in rural Ireland to keep watch over Anna O'Donnell (Kila Lord Cassidy), a girl who is healthy despite apparently not eating for months. Elizabeth is to report her findings to a group of community men, including a local doctor (Toby Jones) and a religious leader. Elizabeth is a young widow herself coping with trauma, and finds the O'Donnell family deeply religious. As she starts to uncover Anna's secrets, newspaper man William Byrne (Tom Burke) arrives to cover the story.

What Works Well: This compelling mystery is wrapped in rustic blankets of uneducated religious fervor, muddy rural isolation, patriarchal incompetence, and fallout from loss and sin. Director Sebastian Lelio and his co-writer Emma Donoghue (the screenplay is based on her book) maintain a brisk rhythm of revelations, the trudgerous terrain and grim candlelit interiors adding toil to Elizabeth's adventure. Florence Pugh excels in casting a caustic eye at shrouded cultural norms, and Kila Lord Cassidy surfaces a young girl's tortured strength.

What Does Not Work As Well: The book-end scenes intended to underline the universality of storytelling are unnecessary and fall flat. Elizabeth's back-story is only partially leveraged, and plenty of incidents are crammed into a rushed ending.

Conclusion: Weighty in substance, agile in delivery.



All Ace Black Movie Blog reviews are here.

Saturday, 11 November 2023

Movie Review: A Good Person (2023)


Genre: Drama
Director: Zach Braff
Starring: Florence Pugh, Morgan Freeman, Molly Shannon
Running Time: 129 minutes

Synopsis: Allison and Nathan (Florence Pugh and Chinaza Uche) enjoy an engagement party, but then Allison's life is shattered: she is driving the car when an accident claims the life of Nathan's sister and brother-in-law. A year later Allison is single, depressed, living with her exasperated mom Diane (Molly Shannon), and addicted to painkillers. Meanwhile Nathan's orphaned niece Ryan (Celeste O'Connor) is being raised by her grandfather Daniel (Morgan Freeman), a model train hobbyist and recovering alcoholic. When Allison and Daniel unexpectedly meet again, they both have to face the past.

What Works Well: The tender melodrama delves into the destructive intersection of grief and addiction to reveal humanity lurking below the damage. Director and writer Zach Braff controls emotions to pragmatic levels, minimizing theatrical outbursts. Instead, Florence Pugh and Morgan Freeman convey internal turbulence through sorrow and resolve, without shortchanging the demons of addiction, realities of avoidance, and pangs of regret. Residing in the middle of crises caused by others, teenager Ryan represents a future than can either recover or succumb.

What Does Not Work As Well: A lot is going on here: parental abuse, alcoholism, a fatal accident, and addiction are compacted into a couple of characters. The courage to tackle raw social issues is ultimately undermined by uniformly tidy resolutions.

Conclusion: Quietly effective and well-acted without breaking new ground.



All Ace Black Movie Blog reviews are here.

Saturday, 10 December 2022

Movie Review: Don't Worry Darling (2022)

A dramatic mystery thriller, Don't Worry Darling adds a modern spark to established ideas.

In a 1950s setting, married couple Alice and Jack Chambers (Florence Pugh and Harry Styles) live in an idyllic company town called Victory, located on the edge of the desert. Jack joins all the men every morning as they go to work on a secret technology project led by the mysterious Frank (Chris Pine). Alice is friends with the other wives, including Bunny (Olivia Wilde), Shelley (Gemma Chan), and the pregnant Peg. They spend their days luxuriating by the pool and shopping, with everything around them operated by the company.

Alice notices Margaret (KiKi Layne), one of the wives, acting erratically. Then she witnesses a plane crash, leading her to discover and touch the company's out-of-bounds Headquarters building. She starts to suffer from strange visions and the same behaviours that afflicted Margaret. Despite Frank's smooth talk and Jack's attestations that everything is fine, Alice begins to suspect something is very weird about the town of Victory.

Written by Katie Silberman and directed by Olivia Wilde, Don't Worry Darling carries familiar echoes from The Stepford Wives, Eternal Sunshine Of The Spotless Mind, and Inception, among others. But once revealed, the secrets of Victory are also steeped in an evolved context where the thin line between technology's use and misuse becomes increasingly blurry.

On the way to the third act climax, Wilde creates stylish Douglas Sirk/Desperate Housewives mash-up fun with an undercurrent of mounting dread. The ecosystem of Victory provides an intriguing setting of creepy perfection, the men going to work secure in the knowledge that their gratified women are waiting for them at the end of the day. Alice and Jack are an attractive couple not beyond enjoying quick sex in the kitchen with guests milling in the next room, and with Jack on the fast track to success as Frank's next golden boy and Alice surrounded by happy friends, life is good.

Except that Margaret babbles incoherently and seems intent on killing herself, an airplane falls out of the sky and no one seems to care, and Alice starts suffering suspicions and visions (including Busby Berkeley-style dancing girls). Jack can never quite articulate exactly what it is he does for a living, and the middle chapter develops a delectable combination of rising tension and expert gaslighting.

The resolutions are frenzied and frantic, Wilde dumping a big load into the final 30 minutes at the expense of tight dramatic coherence. Pugh soldiers on, her central performance capably carrying the burden of discovery. Harry Styles is less convincing, and Pine is under-utilized.

Don't Worry Darling questions the essence of contentment by unleashing doubt on utopian suburbia. When everything seems quite perfect, it is indeed time to worry.



All Ace Black Movie Blog reviews are here.

Tuesday, 9 November 2021

Monday, 20 January 2020

Movie Review: Little Women (2019)


An adaptation of the classic Louisa May Alcott book, Little Women is a coming-of-age tale with a focus on women carving out identities while grappling with personal and societal expectations and economic realities.

The film unfolds non-linearly across multiple time zones and locations. In simplified form, the March sisters are from a relatively poor Concord, Massachusetts family and growing up in the shadow of the Civil War. Jo (Saoirse Ronan) is fiercely independent and an aspiring writer. Meg (Emma Watson) loves acting and is a romantic at heart. Amy (Florence Pugh) is a painter and wants to marry well. The youngest Beth (Eliza Scanlen) is a talented pianist. With their father (Bob Odenkirk) serving in the war, Marmee (Laura Dern) instills in the girls a strong sense of service and selflessness.

The Marchs are neighbours of the wealthy and kind Mr. Laurence (Chris Cooper), whose grandson Theodore (Timothée Chalamet) becomes friends with the sisters and falls in love with Jo. She sets out to seek her fortune as a writer in New York, where she meets publisher Mr. Dashwood (Tracy Letts) and clashes with academic Friedrich Bhaer (Louis Garrel). Amy heads to Paris for a cultural trip with Aunt March (Meryl Streep). Meg marries a struggling tutor and starts a family. But a sickness will pull the sisters back home to confront unexpected futures.

The sixth cinematic adaptation of Alcott's novel, the 2019 version is a sprawling and ambitious effort infused with a feminist edge. Clocking in at an overlong 135 minutes, writer and director Greta Gerwig takes her time to fully define the four sisters as rounded characters, and chases down their dreams, trials and tribulations on the path to womanhood. Along the way the sisters bicker, fight and support each other, all underpinned by warm foundations of familial love.

Gerwig structures the film as a dizzying jumping exercise, restlessly bouncing between various points of history in the lives of the four sisters. As a result Little Women rarely flows, some scenes spending a matter of seconds in one time and place before the next scene leaps to somewhere else with someone else at a different time.

But the fine work of the talented cast and the investment in characters does pay off in the final third, where the sometimes scattered narrative puzzle pieces start to come together. The film achieves poignant peaks of genuine emotion built on the discrete strengths and weaknesses of the March sisters, and Gerwig presents a satisfyingly wide array of personal achievements mixed with shades of disappointments, all built on honest passion.

While the emphasis on feminism is sometimes speechy and jarring, here it means the freedom to choose a future vision to pursue, and to defend that choice. And while no two dreams are alike, the sisters pragmatically understand their future, like their past, involves compromise and is not meant to be perfect. Gerwig also places admirable emphasis on economics as an essential part of future plans. Balancing the romantic pursuit of love, marriage's role as an economic benefit emerges as a theme.

Little Women enjoys stellar production design, the film recreating interiors and exteriors of the mid to late 1800s with an easy sense of place and time. This is a period piece unafraid to march into the open, as the March sisters stride into a post-war world with every intention to help define it.






All Ace Black Blog Movie Reviews are here.