How Do You Solve a Problem Like Nina: The Ghost of "Promising Young Woman"
by Lynn Lee
Warning: MAJOR SPOILERS for Promising Young Woman. Do not read until you've seen the film.
Can we all agree that Carey Mulligan IS Promising Young Woman? Not just that she’s sensational in it, though she is. No, I mean she is the movie: her performance as the tormented and tormenting protagonist, Cassie, is what holds it together and propels it to its gut-punch of a conclusion.
That’s not to shortchange PYW’s solid supporting cast or writer-director Emerald Fennell, who brings impressive confidence and panache to her feature debut and whose razor-sharp script gave Mulligan a perfect opportunity to shine. But what could have remained merely provocative on page really needed the right acting touch to sell the character’s complex blend of steeliness and vulnerability, wit and anguish, sexiness and inconspicuousness, icy calculation and seething rage, on screen. Luckily for Fennell, and for us, Mulligan convincingly conveys all aspects of this unlikely avenging angel and fuses them into a cohesive, if conflicted, whole.
Well, almost all aspects...