Thoroughbreds **** / *****
Directed by: Cory Finley.
Written by: Cory Finley.
Starring: Anya Taylor-Joy (Lily),
Olivia Cooke (Amanda), Anton Yelchin (Tim), Paul Sparks (Mark), Kaili Vernoff
(Karen).
Thoroughbreds
is a thrilling about a couple of affluent, perhaps sociopathic teenage girls
that was written and directed by Cory Finley – who is amazingly making his
directorial debut. Finley knows his material well, and doesn’t make the mistake
that many first timers do in terms of trying to do too much or overloading on
style for style’s sake. Make no mistake, Thoroughbreds is a very stylish film –
but it’s one that is keenly attuned to its characters and themes. This is a
cold, calculating thriller, punched up initially with witty banter, which only
makes what follows all the more disturbing.
The
film is set in a very affluent area of Connecticut, largely within the walls of
mansion where Lily (Anya Taylor-Joy) lives with her mother and stepfather, Mark
(Paul Sparks). We first enter this home to see her tutoring Amanda (Olivia
Cooke) – and they two girls are as different as can be in appearance and
demeanor. Lily is put together prim and proper, and Amanda looks like a mess.
Amanda is direct in a way that’s initially off-putting for Lily, who finds her
weird. The two girls were once close friends, but have gone their own ways in
recent years. They are getting back together, because Lily is so perfect that
she graduated her prep school early, and returned home, while Amanda is
awaiting trial for a disturbing incident involving her horse. Their friendship
sparks when Amanda witnesses Lily interact with Mark for a few seconds of
seemingly innocuous conversation, and immediately senses (correctly) that Lily
hates her stepfather with a passion. Eventually, the pair decide the best thing
to do would be to kill him. But how?
The
film is split up into chapters – complete with title cards (they’re not really
necessary, but do break up the action). The opening scenes are the two girls
feeling each other out. This is probably where the comparisons some have made
to Heathers comes from – because these exchanges can be witty and funny –
especially when Cooke is delivering direct, acid tongued one-liners, which she
does brilliantly. In these scenes, Lily seems to be the more normal of the two
– but she’s sizing everything up. While we sense from the get go that Amanda
may be a sociopath – she says early on she has no feelings at all (other than
hungry or tired), but has become gifted at faking them (something psychopaths
excel at). Lily suffers from something else – but certainly something – and is
just as gifted at reading others as Amanda is, and better able to manipulate
them that her “weird” friend.
The
friendship between the two of the make up the bulk of the movie. There is a lengthy
subplot involving them trying to enlist Tim (the late, great Anton Yelchin), a
drug dealer, with a statutory rape conviction, who nonetheless is still hanging
out and selling pot to the teenagers in the area. Tim is undeniably sleaze, but
in Yelchin’s hands he becomes an oddly endearing character – a pathetic guy,
with delusions of grandeur, trying to act tougher than he is. He may not be the
smartest character in the world – but he’s smart enough to know when he’s
outmatched. For sparks, in the other major role as the stepdad, it’s the best
work I’ve seen from him (that’s not saying much – he’s awful in House of Cards)
– but he’s essentially playing a rich asshole, who gets to keeping being an asshole
because he’s rich. The regular rules don’t apply to him – which is true of the
girls to, who have grown up in this affluent area.
You
pick a few nits in Thoroughbreds if you wanted to. There’s nothing overly
original about the observation that even in houses that look like that, there
can still be this level of malevolence and violence (there is a hint of Michael
Haneke to the film, except these characters aren’t as blind to their horrific
nature as his characters are). While the climax of the film is brilliantly
staged, I do think it comes on a little too quickly, and I’m not entirely sure
I buy the reasons behind Amanda’s actions.
Yet,
those are relatively minor quibbles – ones that only bother me a little in
retrospect, not in the moment. Overall, Thoroughbreds is a chilling thriller –
one that has more in common with Hitchcock than Heathers, and one that
announces a major new talent in Finley.
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