Bolshoi ballerina Dominika Egorova (Jennifer Lawrence) is hurt in an on stage
accident that will later turn out not to have been an accident at all. In any
case, she will not be able to dance again on her old level, leaving her and her
sick mother without much of an income or even a place to stay, for even their
apartment belongs to the ballet company. Fortunately or unfortunately,
Dominika’s uncle Vanya (Matthias Schoenaerts) is deeply involved in the world of
espionage and is perfectly willing to provide his niece with a way in,
especially after he has provided her with information concerning the truth about
her accident and is probably quite satisfied with the talent for violence she
then demonstrates.
Eventually, Dominika lands in a school for sexspionage (headmistress:
Charlotte Rampling) where she shows talent as well as a rather unwanted spine.
Thanks to her uncle, and one General Korchoi (Jeremy Irons), she soon is set
upon her first case/victim. There’s a highly placed mole somewhere in the
Russian secret services, and Dominika is supposed to seduce the mole’s handler
Nate Nash (Joel Edgerton) to find out their identity. Dominika for her part
might have plans, perhaps even feelings, all of her own.
Francis Lawrence’s spy novel adaptation Red Sparrow is an at
times rather impressive watch, yet it it is also full of niggling little
problems. The most obvious faux pas right from the start is the filmmaker’s
decision to have all the Russian characters – none of whom is actually being
played by a Russian actor, pretty much the only nationality where that sort of
thing is still allowed without people on the Internet shouting angrily – speak
with mild, fake Russian accents, because clearly, all Russians talk in accented
English with each other, right? It’s definitely the sort of decision that
already starts the film up feeling highly artificial. The movie’s problematic
idea of Russia is further increased by its portrayal of the little it shows of
the country’s culture as exclusively inhabited by rapists and human monsters.
The film’s portrayal of the political side of things seems to have little to do
with actual Russian nationalism and the way it works today and much more with a
US-style nightmare vision of their old enemy turned new enemy but actually
staying completely the same. Which would bother me much less if the US secret
services at least were played a little less like a goody-goody bunch who
apparently don’t do horrible things on a daily basis. Edgerton’s Nash is such a
nice, careful, pleasant and loveable guy it is impossible to buy him as a spy,
for whatever country.
And still, I had a lot of fun watching this thing, once I had adjusted my
perspective on it towards it being a really high budget exploitation film of the
kind nobody makes anymore (and really, that was seldom made at all even in the
past). It’s a surprisingly unpleasant film for what at its core is a mainstream
spy movie, full of torture, sexual violence, threats of sexual violence, and a
lot of random nasty stuff put in just to make the film feel extra gritty. There
is, for example, no reason at all to give our heroine’s uncle the incestuous
hots for her apart from making him even less pleasant than he already is; it’s
like adding kicking dogs as an additional vice to Hitler. The thing is, director
Lawrence turns out to be a great big budget exploitation director, so all these
scenes of suffering, vice, and men not named Edgerton behaving toxically, only
to be punished by our heroine in one way or the other, are unpleasant to watch
in just the right way to be entertaining, and not just only in the “did that big
Hollywood production honestly just do that?” kind of way. The film has a
melodramatic, operatic drive to it, really digging into the core of making
movies you enjoy to cringe at. And like with a lot of good exploitation fare,
you can perfectly well argue the whole she-bang is actually a feminist film
about a tough woman with an untouchable moral core beating all the asshole men
in her life with their own vices.
It helps that Lawrence the actress seems – as usual – in absolute control of
her abilities, not attempting to portray Dominika as a normal person but the
sort of heightened, iconic near-mythological being that exists in this sort of
plot. It’s an honestly great job at point-exact overacting through a lot of grim
facial expressions, never laying it on too thick, but always exactly as
thick as the film needs. Her counterpart Edgerton – usually a fine actor - is
surprisingly colourless, but then, what’s a guy to do when a script doesn’t give
him any actual personality beside being as morally upright as a knight? The rest
of the cast does traditionally fine character actor work (sadly, Irons isn’t
there to do more than look thin, pale and sad), so it is difficult not to enjoy
the film at least on this level.
But then, I’ve never pretended to dislike exploitation films, so I’m
certainly not going to start complaining when I see one made by talented
people who have been provided with a lot of money for excellent outfits and only
the best locations and sets.
Wednesday, August 15, 2018
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