Sunday, December 26, 2021

Good Things in 2021

 My end of the year list is just "everything good I happened to watch in 2021." Maybe it was released this year, maybe I just got around to it now. (First viewings counted only.) It's only movies and series - no videogames, RPG's, streams, podcasts, plays, or books, though I was privileged to have enjoyed many of those as well. Also I grouped the TV series into the seasons I saw this year.

These are only the works I enjoyed and would recommend to others. I had about a 50/50 hit rating for that. It's sorted from best to worst - I'm not doing the artificial suspense where I count down and you wonder if I entirely forgot a movie, or made it number one.

The point of this list is mostly to tell people "you want to kill time and see something good? Watch these." If you see something on this list and think "wow yeah, that was killer", then think how good all the things above it must be.

I went through all my streaming accounts and blog posts and came up with 51 pieces from recent years I saw this year. After that I also list seven much older movies I saw for the first time that are basically classics, let alone rank them. You don't need me to describe them or pitch them to you.

When I had previously written a post on the work, I just link to that post. Otherwise I write a sentence of short description for why you might want to see it. Though as we go down the list and it just becomes things everyone knows about, I stop bothering to write up the description. You know plenty about what "Witcher Season 2" is like already.

The first two entries are not going to surprise anyone who has read me recently...

RMovie/TV SeriesSourceCommentary
1ArcaneNetflixhttps://prequelsredeemed.blogspot.com/2021/11/how-to-recommend-arcane.html
2The Harder They FallNetflixhttps://prequelsredeemed.blogspot.com/2021/11/megapost-six-movies-you-should-see.html
3Lost Girls and Love HotelsAmazon $https://prequelsredeemed.blogspot.com/2021/09/lost-girls-and-love-hotels.html
4For All Mankind S1-2Apple TVhttps://prequelsredeemed.blogspot.com/2021/10/i-watched-everything-good-on-apple-tv.html
5PigAmazon $Nick Cage doing John Wick but as a chef assaulting the Portland Fine Dining scene.
6WandaVisionDisneyYou all heard about this this year. The core 6 episodes are worthy of the acclaim.
7Vast of NightAmazon PrimeAn extremely mesmerizing close-up of two kids in a small town facing the existential mystery of an alien invasion.
8The GuardAmazon $Brendan Gleesan and Don Cheadle have great chemistry in an Irish Buddy Cop Comedy
9Brand New Cherry FlavorNetflixVisceral horror movie drawn out over 8 hours, about the nature and costs of revenge.
10CruellaDisneyhttps://prequelsredeemed.blogspot.com/2021/06/black-and-white-and-red-all-over.html
11Green KnightAmazon $Tour de force of the meaning of masculinity and our understanding of Arthurian epics.
12Killing Them SoftlyAmazon $Modern mafia movie with Brad Pitt and James Gandolfini giving great performances and heavy commentary on the 2008 financial crisis.
13Midnight MassNetflixhttps://prequelsredeemed.blogspot.com/2021/09/midnight-mass-sun-rises-on-good-and-bad.html
14Willy's WonderlandAmazon $Nick Cage doing Five Nights at Freddies as a silent protagonist action hero. It's really amazing and the plot moves fast.
15LockeAmazon $Two hours of Tom Hardy making phone calls as his family crumbles and he tries to organize concrete logistics. WIll make you care about the world of concrete.
16VALAmazon $Documentary of Val Kilmer, told in three voices, who was much more a demiurgic character than I knew.
17RevolverAmazon $Classic Guy Ritchie criminal romp that slowly turns into psychological-existential metaphor, plus kabbalah.
18Nine DaysAmazon PrimeMetaphysical fantasy about souls who will be born into bodies, and how best to appreciate the many experiences of a human life.
19Dune 2021Theatershttps://prequelsredeemed.blogspot.com/2021/11/megapost-six-movies-you-should-see.html
20Tig Notaro Happy To Be HereNetflixThis is more a general pointer to Tig's work. I only discovered it this year, and they do emotional devastation plus genuine comedy at the horror of it all amazingly well.
21CureYoutubeMy foray into japanese horror.
22The Power of the DogNetflixA very slow paced western focused on the emotional internality of a few characters, with very good, intense, and slow-moving scenes in the back half.
23KatlaNetflixIcelandic horror series about changelings, and the introspective questions their existence would inspire.
24NightcrawlerAmazon $
25BlissAmazon PrimeSerious scifi that benefits from not being spoiled.
26The TangleAmazon PrimeCheap Amazon scifi sometimes turns out amazing set pieces.
27Queen's GambitNetflix
28Army of ThievesNetflixThe prequel to Snyder's zombie remake, it's actually more engaging in it's faux-mythic-fantasy trappings.
29The Boys S2Amazon Prime
30Justice League: Snyder CutHBO MaxMuch better than expected, changing the focal point of the entire work.
31Army of the DeadNetflix
32Expanse S5-6Amazon PrimeReally good political drama in space but the highlights at two characters (Avisirala and Amos.)
33LokiDisney
34RevenantAmazon $
35Spider-Man: No Way HomeTheatershttps://prequelsredeemed.blogspot.com/2021/12/spider-man-no-way-home.html
36I, OriginsAmazon $Brit Marling at her most predictable, but I still love it.
37Bo Burnham: InsideNetflixThis comedian's intense introspection about a year in quarantine. Has some very compelling earworms.
38History of Time TravelAmazon PrimeCheap Amazon scifi sometimes turns out amazing set pieces.
39The Sinner S1Netflix
40Hell on Wheels S1 and S4Amazon $Very gritty exploration of race/class/gender divides on the frontier in the 19th century. Colm Meaney is amazing as an over the top villain. Common also takes my heart.
41Angel HeartAmazon $Laughable and grotesque New Orleans horror.
42Mandalorian S2Disney
43Witcher S2Netflix
44I Care a LotNetflixhttps://prequelsredeemed.blogspot.com/2021/02/i-care-about-bodies-lot.html
45HelstromHuluPsychological horror that's presumably part of the MCU but not really.
46THE Suicide SquadHBO MaxIt was what we expected based off the previous one.
47Siren S1-S2HuluCW style soapdrama that focuses on mermaids, the northwest, and polyamory.
48MelancholiaHulu
49Art of Self DefenseAmazon $Jesse Eisenberg doing mumblecore building masculine identity in an LA cult.
50Exit Through the Gift ShopAmazon $Banksy's self-critical documentary about a person who mirrored him.
51The Station AgentAmazon $
YClassics Corner
1963ContemptAmazon $
1973The Last of ShielaAmazon $Actually a puzzle hunt in movie form.
1975Dog Day AfternoonAmazon $
1979StalkerAmazon $Best of the classics.
1988Last Temptation of ChristAmazon $
1990Total RecallAmazon $https://prequelsredeemed.blogspot.com/2021/11/megapost-six-movies-you-should-see.html
1994The CrowAmazon $Unavoidably more goth due to the IRL story around it.

Thursday, December 23, 2021

Spider-Man: No Way Home

 


This is a weird movie to analyze for a number of reasons. For one, Disney has released an unprecedented amount of details from the movie to "build hype", meaning you likely walk in knowing what will happen for the entire first half of the movie.

For another, this movie relies on having seen more movies previously than any film I've heard of before. It assumes familiarity with all the Avengers movies, including the two Spider-Man movies in that universe. But it also pulls in from the previous five Spider-Man movies released by Sony from 2002 to 2014. Maybe catch "Into the Spiderverse" just for thematic parallels. (There's even some references to the Netflix Marvel series, and the Tom Hardy Venom.) You can still understand the plot of what is happening without those, but many of the jokes will fall flat otherwise.

But what makes it harder is... it's really three movies in a row, which are pretty different. If we're doing any analysis deeper than "the jokes sure were funny," we have to admit that Spider-Man 3 goes through three very different stories. We'll go into those.

Lastly, my own personal experience watching this also couldn't help but be shaped by reading Worm. This shouldn't be that surprising: both are stories about a teenage superhero with bug powers and wrestling with the split between their quotidian life and their awesome power. There were just multiple scenes I couldn't help watching without thinking "how did Worm do this exact thing."

Act I: A social media horror story.

The first part of the story is the most affecting and disturbing. And the least subtle. Mysterioso ended Spider-Man 2 by exposing Peter Parker's identity and accusing him of of murder, broadcast live over the web and J. Jonah Jameson's Breitbart/Alex Jones style show. For about 40 minutes we live through a painful immersive piece about the entire world suddenly knowing our deepest secrets and believing absurdly wrong things about us. (As I said at the time, "Far From Home" was really the Marvel movie about the powers of the reality stone.)

Obviously, it's "about" the modern phenomenon of going viral and getting canceled. "Twitter has one main character every day - the goal is to never be it." It's also about our fear at fake news and how reality has polarized into different silos, completely in disagreement, where our enemies take the barest string of facts and come to radically different beliefs based on them. 

Much of this act is not shot realistically, but metaphorically. The shot of all the students in Peter's school parting like a wave for him while their flip-phones record him, evokes the famous scene from Tobey's Spider-Man 2 when the subway of New Yorkers crowd surf Spidey on their hands. 


The movie even realistically shows that going "viral" like this is not a one-sided affair. Half the world hates you, but half the world (or more) loves you. (The opening radio show calls of Hancock also do this, quickly.) But the earnest love is awkward and certainly not a balance for the pain of all the hate. This is epitomized in the scene in front of the trophy case that Parker's principal has made to celebrate their "hero." (That scene can't help but recall in Worm when Taylor returns to her high school as one of the reigning crimelords of the city, and the principal falls over herself to favor her.)

The whole act is effective, and extremely uncomfortable. It's hard to call something that digs into our modern fears this much "fun." There is no real truth, just whichever fantasies the public and our enemies find the most convincing.

JJJ I think is a problem. Jameson has always been this sort of propagandist preaching hate towards Spiderman, but in the comics and other movies he has a personal connection to Spiderman. He is his employer, and generally an asshole but a human-sized one, and will in the end go out of his way to show humanity to Peter Parker. This both redeems the jerk, and lets us laugh at him for the dramatic irony of hating someone's public identity so much while not seeing them and liking them up close. The latest trilogy completely misses this human connection, and in doing so just makes Jameson an unforgivable monster. Anyway...

Act II: The multiverse

This is what the trailers were all about. Peter performs a magical spell with Dr. Strange that "messes up" and summons antagonists and other Spidermen from the previous two trilogies. We get William Dafoe's Green Goblin and Alfred Molina's Doc Ock and oh yeah Jamie Foxx and... the janitor from Wings as a sand monster.

The entire magic spell plot is senseless, with no logic but what is needed for the appropriate drama, and has both Peter and Dr. Strange being absurdly stupid (which is fine) and immediately kicking themselves for how stupid they were right after (which is not. Either commit to the bit or don't do it.) I am fine with characters being irrational and doing what is needed for the plot, if we believe in them as characters, but not if they go around the rest of the story commenting on how weird it was they did that thing. But fine.

What is more to be regretted is the drawn out tease of the "multiverse" the MCU has been doing. We've had "the multiverse is coming... dun dun dun" now be central to Spider-Man 2, WandaVision, the Loki series, and now this movie. It's still always "coming" and we "know frighteningly little about it." Presumably this will take center stage in the movie teased after these credits, but it has been a damn lot of teasing. Especially since the amount of multiverse crossover in this movie is basically pornographic.

Anyway, this act stretches from the first scene between Peter and Strange in the sanctum to right after their second. The one thing I really want to say for it is... damn William Dafoe is good. When I first saw the Green Goblin appear, I felt bad that MCU had reduced him to a CGI cameo for a paycheck. But his scene in the soup kitchen, and later in Happy's apartment, really let him shine.

The Act ends when Peter manages to defeat Dr. Strange in his own pocket dimension, and is a little bit in awe of himself for having done it. Which slightly touches on but doesn't embrace what could have been the main theme of this movie: awesome power.

In Worm, there is a scene after Taylor has defeated Mannequin, the technologically enhanced member of the Slaughterhouse 9, and one of the most feared villains on the planet. She crawls back into her apartment to find some hoodlums there. And they are terrified at how monstrous she is, having killed a monstrous enemy, and she reflects on what this says about her. Spider-Man realizing he just defeated the world's greatest magic user could cause that same reflection.

Because that is a sub-theme of this entire Act. Oh no, Doctor Octopus is here to threaten our universe's Peter Parker who has never had to deal with those robotic tentacles before. Oh it's no problem, Doc Ock has bluetooth on and Tony Stark gave Parker the best hacking tools money can buy. Mechanical villain is easily disabled. In fact with his magic friend, Spiderman doesn't have to kill any of these enemies, but can trivially lock five of them up in inescapable prisons. 

This world (the Avenger's) is the super-science world. This Peter Parker is not just a webslinger, but possibly the most powerful person in this universe. Nothing is... really a threat to him. The awe of being a supreme entity could be a really interesting topic for a teenage superhero to wrestle with. I highly recommend "Strong Female Protagonist" for this very reason. But this movie doesn't engage with this sort of existential crisis.

Act III: Everyone Deserves a Second Chance

That's the title of this act because they repeat this moral like a dozen times. This finishes up the movie, even though it has two distinct parts (Peter trying at first to cure all the villains of their defects, and then the all out brawl after that fails the first time) but they are at least related to each other, and follow a combined arc.

It's certainly interesting as a series of short stories, and allows all the cameo actors to show off briefly, and we get the adorable chatter between the three different Spidermen. But I'm not gonna pretend that was a theme that was in any way supported by the first half of the movie.

The death of a major character here is, as everyone else has said, unearned. I don't really have anything to add to that besides how annoying it is that the new myths of our culture are so dependent on actors' contracts and the need for a main character to have the same sort of tragic backstory as their previous iterations have. It's without doubt the worst part of the movie (especially with the whole "receive a mortal blow, get up and walk around and talk for a while, and then pass out from blood loss, and no hero tries to take them to a hospital at any point.")

***

Update: Second Chances. (Hey, we're thematic here.) Muga brings this up below, but I had wanted to address this regardless once I had a chance to think about it more.

What does "a second chance" mean in this movie? It's the rallying cry of why Peter wants to figure out a way to "fix" the villains (which, to be fair, the movie gives a whole three lines of dialogue to how creepy "fixing" people sounds) so they don't go back just to die.

As Muga says, it's also easy to see this as a theme in how Peter wants to rewind time to fix what went wrong, or at least then rewrite memory.

But these aren't the same thing, nor the other ways "second chances" come up. What does a second chance *mean*?

Does it mean "we think you as a person have a lot of value, that first strike will not put you out, we'll give you another chance to prove yourself." Or does it mean "we will literally let you go back to your mistake, and do it right this time now that you've learned from it?" 

Who is getting the second chance? The same person in the same circumstances, just hoping the fate goes another way? A person who has learned from what went wrong the first time? Or a person that has been forcibly changed by external forces?

What does mercy and redemption really mean? Do we value people because "they are not the worse thing they have ever done", or are we saying "if I were god, it would be my responsibility to fix all the bad parts of people?"

These are all good questions to be raised by a movie. But this movie in itself is not interested in their complexity, and just slaps multiple things together that aren't really connected to say "second chances!"

Saturday, November 27, 2021

How to Recommend Arcane

 So there is this weird thing where a lot of fans of the game League of Legends are saying "the cartoon Arcane on Netflix is good and you should watch it." The reasons they give are:

1. You don't need to know League of Legends to enjoy it.
2. The animation is sooooo good.

And if they're really specific:

3. One character is soooo cool. (Probably "Silco.")

This is not a very convincing recommendation. You don't lead with why something is really good by trying to reassure about a problem. And "animation quality" only goes so far.


Part of the problem though, is that they are right. This is about the best animated show since the first Avatar. They just don't have the words to articulate why it's setting off alarms of "this is great" in their mind. In an ideal world all it would take is sufficient trust in the person's taste to say "if they say it's 10/10 must watch, then I will" but sadly we live in a fallen world.

(I don't know any League stuff, and did not read any information about the show before watching it. So I did not know how it would end, which most other people did. I feel lucky that way.)

So let's try to recommend it properly.

1. The show has an incredible amount of intention and effort put into it and it shows. The soundtrack is wholly original, including songs from Sting and Imagine Dragons. The animation studio took six years to make it. The voice actors include big name character actors (like Hailee Stanfield and my favorite Shohreh Aghdashloo.) Even the episode titles show thought and thematic understanding.

You know all those movies where you think "wow they paid all this for special effects and big name stars, couldn't they spend a little on the script?" Well this one, they put the effort into the writing.

2. It's not about the plot. It's about the little things. It's about the characterization. The world and its politics and even half its cast are pretty flat and typical for the fantasy genre. But given these set-pieces, the creators wanted to do the best possible example of that world and those characters and it worked. It's about taking a family melodrama and paying it real respect and getting into every scene intensely. It's about making the fight scenes both a) an excuse to show off great animation and b) a catharsis for the emotions between those two characters. The fight scene at the end of Episode 7 raises the bar for fights like the first Matrix did.

IMO, the plot and characters start out slow. The first three episodes are more like backstory you would get in a paragraph of exposition from one series (like "everything changed when the Fire Nation attacked".) Which make them a little bit grating, but once you get to the current time, all these characters have a richness because you have seen where they came from. And once you finish and understand everything, you want to rewatch the beginning so you can actually appreciate all the details this time.

3. That sort of fractal complexity. Remember the thing about "whether you need to know League of Legends to get this?" At first no, but the show is filled with small easter eggs to please those who know more about the world. But that's only a subset of the show is filled with easter eggs for once you can see all the thematic connections. It rewards intensive viewing and understanding.

Which believe me, you really can't believe watching the opening scenes.

4. A comparison in method (though not in scale) is Shakespeare. The plots of Shakespearean plays are pretty basic. But you take a well known plotline, and give serious attention to every character and every bit of dialogue, and it makes a work of art. For some reason this works even better for tragedies, which is what Arcane is. A tragedy where you keep hoping they'll work things out and they're so close, but they were cursed to always fail.

This is really aided by being animation instead of live-action. The attention to character details includes how they are drawn, how they move and flow, and their background music.

5. So yes, some of the characters are very good. Silco, as mentioned above. Jinx and Ekko and Vi and Caitlyn. Unfortunately that doesn't sell a neophyte anymore than saying "Zuko is funny and has a good redemption arc" could sell somehow on Avatar. But well... the good ones are really, really good.

6. It has moral nuance. On the top level this just means "there are two sides fighting each other, but neither is the good side or the bad side." There's the rich side and the poor side, but also the rich side is full of idealists and the poor side is full of cynical criminals. We might root for one character or another, but they're all full humans with understandable goals.

But actually mean there are characters who do genuinely terrible things that hurt and mess up other people. And there are characters who are hurt and only wanted to be loved. And those are the same people. A desire for acceptance or the ability to grant it, is not, in this world, the same thing as being good or having a good effect on the people around you. Which is very realistic, and wholly lacking from television let alone animated stuff.

(I think some of this is an accident. That the creators wanted to make some characters more one-dimensional, and kinda just failed and gave us complicated flawed characters instead.)

***

Anyway, see it. Part of me wants to say "because we won't see it's like again for a while." It's lightning in a bottle and even season 2 will probably fall short.

But another part of me hopes that studios see the reaction to this and realize "the bar has been raised." You can just take years writing and drawing an simple story that's expertly crafted, and audiences will love you for it.

Monday, November 15, 2021

Edgar Wright and Wrong

I haven't seen much discourse around "Last Night in Soho" yet, which is surprising, because it's by pop-auteur Edgar Wright, and features some very controversial decisions. I guess "Eternals" is just eating up all the mindspace... which tells you all you need to know about discourse priorities.

Anyway, this review is going to compare LNiS and one of his first movies Hot Fuzz. This will be so spoilerific that I even blacked out what the movie of comparison is. Point is, only read beyond here if you have seen both movies and don't care about spoilers. (Also you should totally see Hot Fuzz, it's great. Also Last Night in Soho is totally a horror movie so don't see it if you dislike any aspect of scary movies.)


LNiS starts off very strong, using several standard cliches to tell us what moral universe we are in. Thomasin McKenzie plays a rural ingenue Eloise who is going to the city to study fashion, while we see her downplay the fact that she sees the ghost of her mother (which touches on both "generational trauma" and "hysterical women" genres.) The modern city she arrives to turns out to be... dingy and disillusioning. Her taxi driver makes "jokes" about stalking her, her dorm room is tiny and shared with a character we are supposed to see as "low class playing at elite," and all in all it's a shattering of the fantasy of the city Thomasin has from sixties culture of movies and dances and flowing dresses. So far, so good, the metaphorical stakes are set.

[The racial dynamics of the very English movie are... complicated. Eloise is lily white and a symbol of purity, and her first antagonists are women who all have much darker skin than her and were created in a lab to give off "cosmopolitan foreign vibes." But the filmmaker probably considers those cool girls largerly white, and the one person from the city who is uncomplicatedly nice to Eloise is very black. So you can read that as successful tokenism, or you can see the classism against the cool girls as shading into colorism if not specific racism. Anyway.]

In short order, Eloise moves into a flat in an old house and has a dream, where she is glamorous Anna Taylor-Joy in the height of sixties glamour. It's really a beautiful scene (I think it was single-shot, but not sure) and shows how what Eloise most wants is a high-class fantasy of the past. She has witty repartee and a fancy cocktail with Matt Smith who dances with her and then punches out a creepy guy who calls her a wh-re. (The movie makes frequent use of slurs against women to stab a scene with the threat of degradation. Eloise's greatest fear is to be the women these words describe, much like how the n-word was originally a word of *differentiation* between classes of freedmen, used only to describe the underclass that the middle-class African Americans feared becoming.)

But even in her dreams, the threat of class degradation follows Eloise, and her dream doppleganger Sandy. (Actually this is complicated: the dreams *start* with Eloise and Sandy performing the same actions and us seeing the other actress reflected in mirrors, which is really cool, but quickly Eloise moves to a third-person observer role and is often entirely separated from the actions Sandy takes.) She is tricked by Matt Smith (only known as "Jack") into being a sleazily dressed dancing girl to the hoots and jeers of ugly old men. We are then shown a horrific montage of her fellow dancing girls and how they fall into prostitution, which Sandy will as well. The movie leaves the sexual violence (mostly) as unseen dread, and emphasizes only how low-class the whole thing is.

Eloise spends a while losing her grip on reality as her dream world shifts into her waking life, and we are told this is just like what happened to her mother (and is a clear metaphor for the strain of moving to the city.) This climaxes in the film's tour-d-force where Eloise and her black boyfriend are hooking up in her bed and she suddenly starts seeing Jack murdering Sandy with a knife for disobeying him. Eloise starts screaming, the boy panics especially as she keeps screaming even after he has stepped away, and the landlord Ms. Collins bangs down the door. So in the same shot we have allusions to interracial sexual assault, black fear of being wrongly lynched, and a bloody sex trafficking murder that two of the five people in the scene can't see. It's intense. We see Sandy die of neck wounds.

Eloise spends the rest of this movie trying to solve the murder and find Jack (who she suspects to be a threatening creep at her bar, but isn't) and seeing her reality dissolve as spectres of all those ugly old male clients haunt her.

Here is where you have to trust I have told you everything relevant and am not skipping over minor details:

When Eloise tries to flee the city, Ms. Collins (for no particular reason) tells her that she is Sandy, and she actually took the knife and killed Jack, and then went hunting using the promise of her body, and killed dozens of her clients.

What.

Let's compare to one of Wright's first films "Hot Fuzz" which is about fascism (the word is used several times.) Simon Pegg plays a cop who strictly enforces the law to the letter and allows no flexibility. He is kicked out to small town with no crime and a police force that lets all scofflaws completely evade the justice system. He is incensed that this does not fit his conception of order, but the townspeople insist they are happy and he is too strict, which becomes absurd as we see a number of mysterious murders take place and the bucolic townspeople sweep them under the rug.

The twist halfway through is that the town elders are the real fascists, who summarily execute anyone who causes the slightest bit of trouble or ugliness to their town (including the kids who Pegg had brought in for underage drinking.) The theme of the entire movie so far had been "the pursuit of law can go too far", the flip is only that it's not Pegg's character who was going too far. And the conflict of "adherence to the law" vs "local judgment" shows that the latter can be just as cruel and destructive as the former.

It's a really fun movie that pays off paying attention to detail and caring about themes. Heck they spend like five minutes of screentime flashing back to every minor clue that set this up, clues as frequent and small as a typo of the protagonist's name in the local paper.

The point is that LNiS does *none of this*. All we've seen of Sandy is a horrifying trap of sex-trafficking, and not like, a cruel streak of someone who likes to take visceral vengeance. Her first killing is an entirely justified self-defense... and then the narration just tells us she also committed uncountable serial killings after that. (There's a similarity to I Am Legend when we learn these ghosts of ugly men haunting Eloise were trying to seek justice, but again lacking I Am Legend's buildup. In the Will Smith movie, we can see all of the zombies' actions were about freeing their damsel in distress, whereas these ghosts "help" Eloise get their justice by... holding her down and trapping her.)

I am sympathetic to "in pursuit of justice we can go too far and become the real villain", but you have to build that shit up. You can't just show an extremely sympathetic victim and then say "once they got any agency they killed a dozen people off screen how about that?"

[Also this Sandy is now definitely the villain, and the action of the climax is her trying to kill Eloise and her boyfriend and then burning to death in her house.]

And it's really sad because the first nine/tenths of the movie is so good artistically. The set design is excellent at details for both showing a high-glamour and a gritty and dingey world. The blocking choreography for Sandy and Eloise are amazing (and what many in the audience probably came for.) Everyone involved obviously loves fashion and treated this movie as an excuse to dive into the closest of half a century ago. So much about this movie is good, and I am sure Wright wanted to inject moral nuance into a typical damsel-in-distress narrative. But "what if everything you knew was actually the other way around" just doesn't do it.

To play contrarian, you could make an *existentialist* argument that the film is precisely about our lack of knowledge. That just because you dreamed of yourself as the ghost of a person and identified with them *does not mean you actually know them.* The being you identified with may end up being very much not you, the victim you pitied may be the real monster, and the world of the past you longed for you never understood. But again, it's better when that is supported by the text in some way and not just a rug ripped out from under you in the last moment.