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Promising Young Woman

By John Mulderig,
Posted: 12/28/2020

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Carey Mulligan and Bo Burnham star in a scene from the movie "Promising Young Woman." The Catholic News Service classification is O -- morally offensive. The Motion Picture Association rating is R -- restricted. Under 17 requires accompanying parent or adult guardian. (CNS photo/Merie Weismiller Wallace, Focus Features)


NEW YORK (CNS) -- Vengeance-driven vigilantism is the order of the day in "Promising Young Woman" (Focus). The sad result is that writer-director Emerald Fennell's cinematically impressive, black comedy-tinged drama wastes its opportunity to make morally legitimate points about a genuine social evil.

Traumatized and embittered by the sexual victimization of her childhood friend Nina during their time attending medical school together -- the ultimate outcome of which, the script implies, was suicide -- gifted Cassandra "Cassie" Thomas (Carey Mulligan) has abandoned her ambition to become a doctor. Instead, she works listlessly as a barista.

By night, however, Cassie pursues a dark avocation with all the skill and vigor she fails to apply to her day job. Visiting various watering holes, Cassie pretends to be too drunk to care for herself. In response, one or another of the men around her offers to escort her home. But their seemingly good intentions inevitably turn out to be a cover for their real purpose: to prey on her vulnerability.

The two main perpetrators depicted in the film, Jerry (Adam Brody) and Neil (Christopher Mintz-Plasse), meet differing fates at Cassie's hands based on their behavior toward her. A notebook she keeps shows that Cassie has played her vengeful trick on scores of others, many of whom she has killed.

After Cassie becomes romantically involved with pediatric surgeon Ryan (Bo Burnham) -- another colleague from med school with whom she accidentally reconnects -- she considers abandoning her vendetta. But the chance to exact revenge on Al Monroe (Chris Lowell), the physician she holds most responsible for Nina's death, proves a difficult temptation to resist.

While Fennell invites viewers to take Cassie's campaign of often-fatal feminism lightheartedly, the underlying message that her targets had it coming remains. Consequently, the important ethical observations the movie makes about sexual assault and its aftermath -- as well as about the social attitudes that allow it flourish -- are fatally undermined.

The film contains skewed values, intense but almost bloodless violence, a rape theme, a premarital situation, drug use, a few profanities, several milder oaths, pervasive rough and some crude language and an obscene gesture. The Catholic News Service classification is O -- morally offensive. The Motion Picture Association rating is R -- restricted. Under 17 requires accompanying parent or adult guardian.

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Mulderig is on the staff of Catholic News Service.

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CAPSULE REVIEW

"Promising Young Woman" (Focus)

Vengeance-driven vigilantism is the order of the day in this black comedy-tinged drama from writer-director Emerald Fennell. Traumatized and embittered by the sexual victimization and subsequent death of a childhood friend during their time attending medical school together, a barista (Carey Mulligan) who has abandoned her ambition to become a doctor spends her nights in various watering holes pretending to be too drunk to care for herself, then punishing the men (including Adam Brody and Christopher Mintz-Plasse) who try to prey on her vulnerability. Romance with a pediatric surgeon (Bo Burnham), another colleague from med school with whom she accidentally reconnects, leads her to consider abandoning her vendetta. But the chance to exact revenge on the physician (Chris Lowell) she holds most responsible for her pal's demise proves a difficult temptation to resist. While Fennell invites viewers to take her heroine's campaign of often-fatal feminism lightheartedly, the underlying message that her targets had it coming remains, wasting the opportunity for this cinematically impressive work to make morally legitimate points about a genuine social evil. Skewed values, intense but almost bloodless violence, a rape theme, a premarital situation, drug use, a few profanities, several milder oaths, pervasive rough and some crude language, an obscene gesture. The Catholic News Service classification is O -- morally offensive. The Motion Picture Association rating is R -- restricted. Under 17 requires accompanying parent or adult guardian.

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CLASSIFICATION

"Promising Young Woman" (Focus) -- Catholic News Service classification, O -- morally offensive. Motion Picture Association rating, R -- restricted. Under 17 requires accompanying parent or adult guardian.