Showing posts with label Zendaya. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Zendaya. Show all posts

Saturday, June 1, 2024

Challengers


 


















Director Luca Guadagnino


Mike Faist, Zendaya, and Josh O'Connor

The director with Zendaya
































CHALLENGERS        C-                                                                                                              USA  Italy  (131 mi)  2024  d: Luca Guadagnino

JULES AND JIM (1962) this isn’t.  Not sure what the appeal of this movie is, hyped by the money train of gala fashion statements from the press tour, as it’s about as unsubtle as any film seen in years, hitting every cliché imaginable, even becoming a parody of itself, finding no new ground to explore, and can often feel laughable in the overly contrived melodrama, using the often intrusive, adrenaline-pumping, techno house music by Trent Reznor and Atticus Ross that sounds right out of the playbook of Giorgio Moroder, feeling more at home at a Monster Truck Jam echoing through an enormous stadium, pushing unsustainable levels of tension that never actually seem to exist.  Nonetheless, this film is a box office hit, easily the director’s most commercial effort yet, despite its propensity for abstraction, currently the #3 film in America behind Ryan Gosling’s THE FALL GUY and the latest STAR WARS adventure, receiving all kinds of critical superlatives, where it plays out like an action movie, mixing elements of an old-fashioned Sergio Leone western, with a good guy versus a bad guy, leading to an ultimate showdown, yet there’s little to no action.  The interest of the film seems to have been driven by a promotional teaser trailer of Zendaya sitting on the bed of a hotel room surrounded by two cute guys as they’re about to engage in a sexual ménage à trois, Challengers | Official Trailer YouTube (2:15), set to the salacious use of Rihanna - S&M YouTube (4:04), no doubt answering the question whether sex still sells in 2024, with Zendaya uttering the line, “I’m taking such good care of my little white boys.”  Setting the drama inside a sports movie leaves us scratching our heads, as it’s not really about tennis at all, conjuring up the dark undertones of Woody Allen’s MATCH POINT (2005), or the ratcheted up tension from Hitchcock, A Face in the Crowd - Strangers on a Train (7/10) Movie CLIP ... YouTube (3:11), but it lacks that kind of psychosexual intrigue and instead feels more like an anti-sports movie, made by someone who doesn’t understand the sport, as it derides the game itself, concentrating instead on the head games that people supposedly play, all the while over-indulging in slow motion shots and trick photography, where the stylistic choices, like the perspective from a tennis ball or from beneath the ground looking up at the server, can be quite kitschy, often looking more like a video game.  Perhaps the biggest flaw is just how unlikable the protagonists are, which is by design, as they are toxic personalities, arrogant and extremely privileged, with an underlying disdain for others, as they’re incapable of empathy, leaving viewers intentionally alienated and distanced, undeserving of our sympathy, feeling all about manipulation, where ethics take a back seat to personal ambition, where we’re fed sports dribble like, “This is about winning the points that matter.”  Written by playwright and novelist Justin Kuritzkes, partner of filmmaker Celine Song who directed Past Lives (2023), another film with a love triangle, collaborating on their next film together as well, QUEER, an adaptation of Beat writer William S. Burrough’s 1985 novel, but the script just never takes us anywhere, lacking narrative finesse, told out of order with continual interruptions, unfolding over 13 years from 2006 to 2019, with the viewer being carried back and forth through time as if it were a tennis ball passing from one side of the court to the other, leaving us in a hollow no-man’s land of what-if’s and could-be’s.  Despite the passage of time, the characters never change at all, but are exactly as we see them in the beginning, showing no signs of development or growth.  Nothing in this film actually delivers, coming up dreadfully short as a sports movie, a sex comedy, a psychodrama, a puzzle film, or a relationship drama, while also failing as a character study, where there’s surprisingly little passion, staying mostly on the surface, so it’s a huge surprise that this is such a critically acclaimed hit, where people are supposedly moved by this, yet it feels more like a manipulative farce, a kind of battle of the sexes, where there are no winners in this movie, which feels dreadfully disappointing, yet that may actually be the point.  First of all, Zendaya was simply brilliant in Sam Levinson’s 2021 #7 Film of the Year Malcom & Marie, much sexier, much smarter, and much more compelling in that role, where her character actually mattered long after the film was over.  Not so here, where the characters are simply forgettable, yet it hits the two boys and a girl love triangle scenario, promising a unique drama that supposedly pushes the boundaries of sex and romance, adding a unique titillation, except it doesn’t, ending up in the same infamous territory as Léos Carax’s POLA X (1999), which featured big stars in steamy roles, yet landed with an empty thud.     

A better tennis/action movie was the television drama I Spy (1965-68), featuring the salt and pepper male combo of Robert Culp and Bill Cosby as undercover intelligence agents posing as a professional tennis player (Culp) and his trainer.  That actually respected the game far more than this does, which exaggerates the physical extremes of the sport, with all its grunts, racket smashes, and thunderous sound effects whenever they hit the ball, never really showing any real athletic prowess, where the operatic excess only works to the film’s detriment.  According to Kuritzkes in Business Insider, this is at least partially inspired by the Serena Williams meltdown at the 2018 U.S Open when she was defeated by 20-year old Naomi Osaka after Williams was charged with three code violations for receiving coaching, racket abuse, and verbal abuse, changing the entire momentum of the match, suggesting that was an “intensely cinematic situation.”  Made by gay Italian film director Luca Guadagnino, creator of the hugely popular summer romance and idyllic gay love story Call Me By Your Name (2017), but also the overly pretentious and equally forgettable I AM LOVE (2009), the director feels mired in a genre rut following his polarizing 2018 American remake of Dario Argento’s horror thriller Suspiria (1977), where he appears to have lost his way, yet he’s raking in the bucks from American producers, in this case MGM/Warner Brothers, where Zendaya is a co-producer alongside former Sony studio head Amy Pascal.  Hollywood is so afraid of losing their audience, they are currently over-spending massively for Marvel comic action figure and super hero movies, dumbing down the product like never before, where in this case the tennis court is like a gladiator spectacle with the combatants entering the arena of the Colosseum for battle, using computer generated VFX effects to enhance an illusion of a sporting event, veering into music video territory, where the dramatic over exaggeration comes across like some Shakespearean Greek tragedy.  While every scene appears over the top, what this film lacks is a heart and soul, seemingly designed for the IMAX experience where loudness matters and big is better.  Centered around a three-set challenge match that extends throughout the length of the film between Art Donaldson (Mike Faist) and Patrick Zweig (Josh O’Connor from Alice Rohrwacher’s La Chimera), best friends since junior tennis but arch-rivals on the court and in love, much of the film is told in flashbacks as the film drifts back and forth in time, immersing us in their series of dramatic entanglements with tennis child prodigy phenom Tashi Duncan (Zendaya), a rising star out of Stanford, a school that receives plenty of product endorsements, as you can’t help noticing the big bold red letters of their sports apparel.  Initially they both fall head over heels by her mix of stunning beauty and overwhelming talent on the court, yet they’re portrayed like dimwitted characters from DUMB AND DUMBER (1994), as they can’t stop staring at her, though leering may be more appropriate.  She seems to get some sort of kick out of their fanboy attention, drawing them both into her sexual lair for a threesome, which seems like a game of cunning manipulation that starts with a fascination with her but they end up groping each other when she removes herself from the picture, with suggestions that this is not strictly heterosexual.  While they claim to be no more than friends, the film drifts into homoerotic territory, but it’s only implied, with plenty of subtext to interpret, never really delivering on that end, delving more into the repressed psyche of the main characters, becoming a film about what drives an athlete, like a buddy movie with inferences of something more.  Claiming she doesn’t want to be a homewrecker, she moves on with her life, and is destined to become a top player until a career-ending injury knocks her out of the game, making use of her sports acumen and psychological insight to become a sought after coach, as she believes every match is about “a relationship” with the opponent.  While the two guys are in a perpetual Sisyphean struggle for her attention, shrugging off the hills and valleys of emotional devastation when they lose, the film drifts into the lurid world behind-the-scenes, suggesting that’s where the drama is, not on the tennis court.  That said, it still spends an inordinate amount of time attempting to build drama on the court, where tennis appears to be a metaphor for pent-up desire, but in a competitive form, featuring crushing volleys with the fury of a WWE wrestling smackdown, then slowed to a crawl between points, with sweat dripping and laser-like stares, only to fizzle out when it matters.      

Improbably, the film is shot by Apichatpong Weerasethakul’s longtime cinematographer Sayombhu Mukdeeprom, who uses obsessive close-ups and the most bizarre and unusual camera angles, perhaps capturing the emotional discombobulation where there is little equilibrium, as nerves are constantly on edge and knocked askew.  This altered perspective reveals the kind of topsy turvy world of professional sport, where one moment you’re among the best in the world, yet in the next it’s all behind you, where you’re struggling to find your identity, which has always been connected to any sport.  The overall central premise of the film is how the mastermind Tashi plays Patrick and Art off of each other, both on and off the court, much more talented than either of them, but forced to sublimate her desires through them, relishing her role as the puppetmaster pulling the strings behind the scenes, yet it unravels in the worst cliché’s, as inflamed desires are reignited in a classic Hollywood windstorm, with trash swirling through the city streets, where winning at tennis means winning the girl, while losing only accentuates all her worst fears about you.  Despite all the talk about how sexy the movie is, suggesting eroticism has returned to the movies post Covid, there’s really no actual sex to speak of, and no nudity except the male anatomy in a locker room setting.  Instead there are swaggering remarks, like trash talk, which always reference power dynamics, with a heightened presence of corporate sponsors, where giant billboards are seen everywhere behind the players, generating very little drama between the onscreen protagonists, which is remarkable for a mainstream movie with more than a two-hour running time.  So what is the compelling factor?  Apparently it’s all about hype and advertising, setting a tone for what this is supposed to be, planting the seed in the minds of viewers, repeatedly telling them what to expect, like the current political practice of repeating a lie so many times until you start to believe it.  It’s hard to believe that actually works in this day and age, yet social media is the driving force behind the media frenzy, and there’s nothing, literally no power on earth holding tweets accountable for the truth.  The heavy-handed nature of the movie gets so monotonous and stupidly repetitive that it’s actually a good film to walk out on, as it simply defies expectations, never even attempting to provide any hint of emotional honesty or cinematic tension, as it’s just a curious effort, to say the least, and something of a nightmare to watch, lost in its own jagged narrative structure and technical wizardry, feeling like all the air has been sucked out of the room.  Cutting back and forth in different time periods, yet supposedly taking place during a decisive tennis match, the narrative continually fills in the back story through flashbacks, à la Mildred Pierce (1945), revealing enough about the three central characters to suggest none of them are worth making a movie about, and yet that’s exactly what Guadagnino has done.  It’s a sad comment on what movies have come to, now so easily accessible through streaming platforms, where you don’t even have to leave your home anymore, suggesting television may actually be winning this battle, though the flipside is streaming services are now typically editing, altering, or censoring movies.  I can count on one hand the number of films I actually wanted to go to a theater to see from this top 100 grossing films of a year ago, 2023 Worldwide Box Office, where most of them are utterly forgettable.  Who is clamoring for all that other crap?  Cinephiles should be appalled.  In earlier generations, like Truffaut and Godard and others, spending time at the local cinematheque watching movies from every era was part of our cinematic education, a vehicle to expanding our artistic appreciation, widening our international horizons, while catching lurid movies on late night television only added to the mystique.  But now that movie theaters themselves show TV commercials before the show, with endless trailers of mind-numbing value, none of which you actually want to see, the era of film festivals and their capacity to provoke thoughtful evaluation may be over, replaced by films like this, which we’re told is a “triumph of filmmaking.”  Unlike other films that we’d eagerly sit through again, like rereading one of our favorite books, it’s hard to imagine sitting through this hot mess of a movie again, even if it plays commercial free on television, as there’s just nothing there.   

Saturday, January 1, 2022

2021 #7 Film of the Year Malcom & Marie














 





Caterpillar House in Carmel, California











MALCOM & MARIE             B+                                                                                              USA  (106 mi)  2021  d:  Sam Levinson

A blistering reincarnation of George and Martha from Mike Nichols’ Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf? (1966), a landmark Edward Albee play and film from the 60’s emphasizing emotional realism, introduced to an entirely new audience, a new generation, updated and modernized with a black cast of only two, starring Malcom (John David Washington) as a 30’s something filmmaker who is elated following the successful premiere of his new film, and Marie (Zendaya, the real surprise, showing surprising depth), his 20’s something girlfriend who has a bone to pick when they get home as he neglected to thank or even mention her in his lengthy speech afterwards, even though the lead character of the film was largely drawn from her own life experiences.  Like the play, though written by the white writer/director Sam Levinson (son of Baltimore filmmaker Barry Levinson) for a black cast, this is an emotionally shattering all-night fight that continually escalates into abusive low blows, playing dirty, getting out of hand, becoming a “searing drama that strips away the surfaces and artificialities and leaves the cast of only (two) players totally wiped out and devastated afterwards, disgusted with themselves and one another, as this kind of abhorrent behavior is the stuff of live theater.”  Similarly, the dialogue is “abusive and dehumanizing in every respect, as these characters learn to come after one another using words as claws, ripping into each other’s flesh until their souls bleed.  For some, it’s just a question of who bleeds more.”  There is no hint of subliminal messaging happening here, it’s all in-your-face direct hits, like darts to a bullseye, with plenty of fingerpointing directing the line of fire.  While not as ferocious as Albee, and let’s face it, no one compares to Elizabeth Taylor in what is arguably the peak performance of her illustrious career, it’s nonetheless an emotional tour de force that accentuates their naturalistic acting skills, all taking place over one night, moving back and forth between the two characters as they offer electrically charged, bravura performances, set in a palatial estate where everything is contemporary and upscale, 360 degree floor to ceiling glass windows, elegantly accentuating modernism, an architectural marvel supposedly rented in Malibu, which happens to be the Caterpillar House in Carmel, California (Caterpillar House - Feldman Architecture).  Shot entirely at night in stunning black and white by Marcell Rév using 35mm film during the Covid pandemic, one of the few films to get a green light, extreme safety precautions were taken to allow filming during a two-week period, where the small size of the cast along with the remoteness and spaciousness of the house may have been contributing factors.  Unlike Albee’s play, choice musical selections are mixed into the back and forth emotional marathon, at times intentionally chosen to reflect a character’s point of view, where the lyrics become part of their heated animosity, with Malcom choosing William Bell - I Forgot To Be Your Lover - YouTube (2:47) in an attempt to apologize and acknowledge his own shortcomings, while Marie contemptuously chooses Dionne Warwick – “Get Rid Of Him” (Scepter) 1964 - YouTube (2:16), sarcastically singing the repeated background chorus to rub it in even further.    

The film is something of a free-for-all, with each getting their opportunity to assault the other verbally, and while Zendaya’s vulnerable yet unflinching style is more discreetly laid-back, Washington, fueled by alcohol, offers a full-frontal body slam of character assassination, holding nothing back, going for the jugular in a full onslaught of personal accusations filled with a layered defense of all countercharges, where the specificity of detail is excruciatingly cruel and punishing, as his bullying inclinations are designed to hurt, unable to stop himself from steamrolling over her, perhaps even enjoying it, where we’ve seen this sort of toxic male behavior before, but rarely in this setting, so completely unguarded, where the target of his incendiary bombs is supposedly the love of his life, the idealization of all that he finds sensuous and beautiful.  This is no made-for-TV moment, but a lacerating assault to the senses that gets to the heart of their relationship, while also serving as an analysis of his filmmaking and human shortcomings, as he liberally borrows from others without paying them their due, a form of artistic plagiarism, and no matter how he huffs and puffs and sticks his chest out, he made a damning error in judgment that has a lifetime of repercussions, as he’s apparently taken her for granted before, which is what she’s really fuming about.  While his career is elevated by positive reviews and plenty of acclaim, her life is now an open book, naked for the whole world to see, including some of her lowest, most cringeworthy moments, feeling somehow violated in the name of art, with the artist receiving all the praise, while her life loses all aspects of privacy and the feeling of being safe around him.  While this may have originated as a discussion about cinema, using one particular female film critic known as “the white girl from the L.A. Times” as the consensus industry opinion, as her opinion can determine success or failure, yet the artist himself directs much of his animus towards this anonymous voice, feeling it is overpowered and often dead-ass wrong, where he hurls a heap of abuse directed toward her, though much of this is so hysterically exaggerated it plays out as human comedy, as he gets so carried away, literally frothing at the mouth in his detestation of what she represents in his business, as she has no appreciation for cinema history or even the extent of what directors actually do, bypassing any meaningful discussion of art, instead breaking it down into political or racial terms, even when they’re not applicable, as it’s easier for her audience to digest her meaning when she resorts to stereotypes.  Marie finds this amusing because the female critic actually praised his film, yet he’s going through all these painful, soul-searching gyrations over what she missed, all of which showcases the frail insecurity of an artist.  Unfortunately, despite the apparent history of cinema lesson, calling out specific directors and their known attributes, this is all a diversion from the actual argument going on with these two individuals attempting to eviscerate the other.  That’s the argument that matters, and everything else feels secondary, but it allows Malcom to elucidate knowledge in his chosen field, coming across as a supremely gifted and educated director, but he’s using that to draw attention away from Marie’s personal accusations.

Marie is insistent in her view that had they not been together as a couple, this film would never have been made, with Malcom creating a drama about a struggling black female drug addict named Imani, claiming she herself was a drug addict when they met.  Malcom dismisses her accusations, “You’re not the first broken girl I’ve known, fucked, or dated,” claiming the character of Imani is an amalgamation of different women he has known, even suggesting he has always been there for Marie, helping her get straight, and that his personal investment into her recovery led to his interest in the material.  While that may be true, Marie claims he basically stole her life without asking permission, and that she is the one person who provides authenticity to the role, wondering why he didn’t cast her, claiming she could have done a better job.  While he contends this is mere jealousy on her part, she surprises him, on the spot sliding into the scary role of a relapsed addict, so totally consumed in the damaged actress character that he wasn’t able to tell the difference, even though she was simply role-playing to make a point that the authenticity is her own.  While they go through changing moods, it’s not all verbal assaults, as there are moments of calm, where the accusations have a chance to sink in and be digested, each offering resurgent assaults, like surprise attacks, hoping to catch the other off-guard.  Their long-suppressed frustrations feel on the mark and scathingly honest, but neither one feels particularly empowered afterwards, or even better for having said it.  Much of the unresolved trauma from the fireworks simply lingers in the air afterwards.  From a viewer standpoint, it’s rare to get this kind of unfiltered personal dialogue in cinema that is more often associated with stage productions, where Maurice Pialat, Jean Eustache, and John Cassavetes are among the most ardent enthusiasts of this kind of raw emotional realism, yet each was heavily criticized, just like this film, for being overly self-indulgent and not being sufficiently cinematic, relying upon theatrical flourishes, yet the caliber of their choice of actors supremely excelled in making their films thoroughly cinematic, viewed today as iconic filmmakers.  What about Richard Yates’ excruciatingly personal 1961 novel Revolutionary Road (2008), made into a middle class malaise film by Sam Mendes that accentuates such a stirring performance by his then wife Kate Winslet, winning the Golden Globe Best Actress, but not even nominated by the Academy?  There are brief dramatic flare-ups in Noah Baumbach’s 2019 Top Ten List #3 Marriage Story, but certainly the entire film is not devoted to a sensory assault.  Malcom would never draw a comparison to those directors because he’s black, where race has a way of defining and categorizing one’s artistic stature.  Instead the names bandied about would be Spike Lee, Barry Jenkins, or John Singleton.  There is really no one like those emotionally eviscerating artists working today, so this is kind of a throwback to a different era, and the choice to use black actors is a novel device, as it’s curiously not really about race, where Malcom as a black filmmaker is resistant to matters of politics and identity, yet the performances and personalities are so thoroughly entrenched in black culture, as is most of the accompanying musical soundtrack, from the sensuous delight of Duke Ellington & John Coltrane - In a sentimental mood ... YouTube (4:18), to a kind of ethereal mood changer with Chicago’s own NNAMDÏ - Wasted (Official Video) - YouTube (4:27), to the raw sexuality of Archie Shepp Goin' Home - YouTube (6:10), which is like a masterclass on what it is to be black.  The idea of opening oneself up to interior dissection and human exploration can fall on its feet or produce amazing results, largely inspired by the probing personal investment of the performances, where both rise to the challenge in this film, feeling genuine and unmistakably heartfelt to the core, which is the most essential truth one can express onscreen.   

Note

Malcom’s rather personal remarks towards the Los Angeles Times are directly attributed to a real-life incident when guest critic Katie Walsh (the white girl from the LA Times) lambasted Levinson’s earlier film ASSASSINATION NATION (2018), which turned into a box office bomb.  While critics are having a field day with damning negative reviews, some criticizing the film for having an overprivileged white writer/director being the spokesperson for what is essentially a black story, but many more think this film is a pathetic attempt to get back at that white lady critic, like a debate the director is having with himself, publicly airing his personal grievances onscreen, where the industry as a whole seems to hold that against the film, providing instead a protective line of support for the critic, both of which shouldn’t matter, as that’s holding a grudge rather than objectively commenting on the material at hand.  More importantly, neither argument matters as they both miss the point, suggesting critics really missed the boat with this one, where the convincing performances of the black actors make this a black story, irrespective of who wrote the material, and the director’s self-involved rant against the critic was an ego trip excursion, a diversionary tactic used to avoid confronting his girlfriend’s accusations, which is what this film is really about.  This is a relationship film exploring their own power dynamic, which can get ugly, yet the real drama is about their own feelings for each other, expressed through a blistering raw honesty rarely seen in cinema.  The film scores points for emotional combustion, the ferocity of the performances, the art design with crisp black and white cinematography, and the eclectic musical selections, which are all in sync in this powerhouse drama, which will likely grow in stature over time, referred to more frequently in a positive light, offering a showcase on superlative acting.

Review: 'Assassination Nation' is exploitative horror that has ...

Review: ‘Assassination Nation’ is exploitative horror that has the gall to lecture us on grrrl power

By Katie Walsh, Los Angeles Times

Sep. 20, 2018 1:05 PM PT

The one good thing to say about the slasher pop satire “Assassination Nation,” a badly bungled attempt at social commentary from writer/director Sam Levinson, is that it’s certainly got spirit. This energetic, blood-slicked horror flick substitutes internet hackers for knife-wielding maniacs, and leaked nudes for slayings. It’s a chaotic jumble of movie references, cellphone footage, emojis, trigger warnings and edgy teen content.

But it’s the fumbled “feminist” commentary that is just embarrassing to watch. The filmmakers have the gall to spend nearly two hours assaulting the audience with sexualized violence, only to turn around and offer up a patronizing lecture on the contradictory social conditioning of women as some kind of grrrl power rallying cry, like it’s a novel revelation. Dude really tried to mansplain the virgin/whore paradigm in the midst of this exploitative claptrap.

“Assassination Nation,” a mystery about a hacker targeting a suburban town, is a tortured, yet dumb metaphor for the Salem Witch Trials — we know this because the town where this takes place is named Salem. The idea seems to be that we’re still attacking innocent people based on rumor and hearsay. People are pilloried for the pics and texts found on their phone — from the mayor’s naughty cross-dressing, to the principal’s personal photos.

Attention quickly focuses on a quartet of smart, sexy, woke BFFs Lily (Odessa Young), Bex (Hari Nef), Em (Abra), and Sarah (Suki Waterhouse), because, well, they’re smart, sexy, rebellious young women hellbent on furthering their female pleasure agenda. Our heroine, Lily, makes impassioned arguments about the liberating and intellectual nature of nudity while simultaneously sexting nudes to the dad (Joel McHale) of a kid she used to babysit. Her friends hector her boyfriend Mark (Bill Skarskard) about orally pleasuring her.

Dude really tried to mansplain the virgin/whore paradigm in the midst of this exploitative claptrap.

They would ostensibly be the modern equivalent of witches, and Lily is first targeted by the angry mob that took down the mayor, the principal and the head cheerleader (Bella Thorne) when everyone identifies her in the sexy pics she sent to “Daddy.” Ostracized, she becomes a target for physical assault.

“Why do people see a picture of a naked girl and want to kill her?”

Good question, Lily, it’s one we’ve been asking for eons. She’s also falsely identified as the hacker, the cause of all this pain and discord.

Every now and then, there’s a flash of a great idea in “Assassination Nation,” whether it’s the revolutionary way the girls treat themselves as sexual subjects, or the bloody representation of female rage. But the logic and storytelling is too convoluted — conflating kink-shaming, homophobia and sexism without teasing out the nuance of how or why these individuals are burned at the stake by the mob.

That may be representative of the chaotic random evil of an anonymous attacker, and the hateful hetero white male mob, but visually, Levinson makes clear his target. He and cinematographer Marcell Rév, who establish a leering gaze directed at the girls’ nubile bods, take much delight in wringing every sexy moment out of attacking young women, shooting scenes of violence that are gratuitously pornographic.

This is common in the horror genre, but this goes above and beyond. And the difference is that Dario Argento never ended his films with a bone-headed lecture about feminism.

At the end of the film, Lily live-streams herself talking about the ways in which she’s been given orders as a girl, to be both sexy and pure, to never speak up or fight back, and for a quick second, an army of girls fall in line with their new leader. So the film both objectifies her and makes her deliver a speech about being objectified, and can’t have it both ways. That 180-degree turnaround is so contrived after the orgy of gore and booty shorts, that it can’t nail the landing on the flip from sarcasm to sincerity.

This film tries to create a B-movie heightened dystopian reality where the gals get their violent comeuppance wearing matching chic vinyl trenchcoats, but the violence is all too nauseatingly real and unsettling. It’s an ugly exploitation of sexual violence in a hollow quest to indict the way our culture pathologizes female sexuality.

“Assassination Nation” might argue that it’s about the internet mob, but its gaze reveals the true, lurid intention, while spewing misguided words to gesture at empowerment.

We see right through you.

‘Assassination Nation’

Running time: 1 hour 50 minutes

Rated: R for disturbing bloody violence, strong sexual material including menace, pervasive language, and for drug and alcohol use — all involving teens