As candidates for image rehab go,Street Stall (2015) 101 Dalmatians' Cruella de Vil poses a particularly vexing challenge. The lady is most famous for trying to make coats out of stolen puppies— vile stuff even by villain standards, and difficult to explain away. So the new Cruellahardly bothers to try, choosing instead to tiptoe around it in killer stilettos.
Cruella, a character once memorialized in song as "an inhuman beast," is reimagined as Estella (Emma Stone), a fashion genius who's not so much evil as misunderstood and maligned — not unlike Tonya Harding in director Craig Gillespie's last film, I, Tonya. Her backstory is framed as a more unhinged Devil Wears Prada, with Emma Thompson filling the role of the boss from hell. (In fact, The Devil Wears Pradascreenwriter Aline Brosh McKenna gets a "story by" credit here.) As a prequel, it's half-baked nonsense. As an excuse for the two Emmas to trade ever-bitchier quips and ever-more-outrageous outfits, it's a ball.
'Cruella' is less interested in retracing old visions than dreaming up new ones, having a good time, and looking fabulous while doing it.
But Cruellaneeds to make a few stops before we get there. In its first half, the film skews more sweet than spiky, charting her journey from birth to grade school to a budding criminal career. Young Estella finds a family of sorts in fellow misfits Horace (Paul Walter Hauser, a cheerful scene-stealer) and Jasper (Joel Fry, a low-key heartthrob), and the three grow up picking pockets together in 1970s London — often with the help of their beloved dogs Buddy and Wink, because Cruellacannot emphasize enough that Estella is notthe anti-canine monster you remember from those other movies.
It's not until Estella lands her dream job working for a high-fashion designer called the Baroness (Thompson) that she turns heel into Cruella, and even then it takes several plot twists to get her fully there. When she does, though, it's worth the wait. Estella is a role Stone could play in her sleep, cute and clever and easy to root for. Cruella, on the other hand, feels like Stone stretching her wings. With the help of a slinky walk, an extra-husky voice, and costumes to die for (oh, we'll get there), Stone refashions herself into the diva we never knew she had inside her.
And still she's eclipsed, intentionally, by Thompson, who not only matches Stone's Cruella smirk for smirk and insult for insult, but makes it look effortless — she'll ruin a person's whole life with less thought than she puts into her lunch order. Liberated from the burden of trying to appear even remotely relatable, Thompson plays up the Baroness's terrifying iciness; she is to this movie what Cruella herself was in the Dalmatiansmovies, which I suppose means she'll be due for her own revisionist prequel in about two more reboot cycles.
The most purely pleasurable stretch of Cruellacomes in its middle, when these larger-than-life figures battle for headlines with increasingly elaborate gowns and the stunts to show them off. (This film takes place in a universe where one designer upstaging another is considered front-page news, and I want to go to there.) The Baroness's dresses are stunning in their own right, all luxe fabrics and elegant silhouettes, but it's in Cruella's that costume designer Jenny Beavan truly outdoes herself.
Cruella's designs are deliberately alienating, even ugly, and get edgier as she falls further into her wicked side; at one point, she literally turns trash into couture. They're outfits dreamed up by a woman who cares less about looking beautiful or tasteful than in making you look, period, and they represent as strong a statement about the character's renegade spirit as anything in Dana Fox and Tony McNamara's script or even Stone's performance.
These clothes are the boldest element of a movie that otherwise wears its supposed punk-rock influences like a kid discovering Hot Topic for the first time. Fun though it is, Cruelladefaults too frequently to the safe and obvious: You can tell immediately that this is the kind of movie that's going to have the Rolling Stones' "Sympathy for the Devil" on the soundtrack, and lo and behold, there it is. Even the script struggles to leave well enough alone, padding its 135-minute run time with not just an extensive voiceover but multiple scenes in which Estella recaps recent plot points, and Dalmatiansreferences that feel more obligatory than organic.
Then again, these are choices that make perfect sense for a family-friendly Disney crowdpleaser —which is what this actually is under all that jet-black eyeliner, even if Cruella and Cruellawould prefer you to forget from time to time. Seen in that light, stacked against the studio's other recent live-action remakes, reboots, prequels, and sequels, it stands out as a pleasant surprise. Like the fashionista who gave it its name, Cruellais less interested in retracing old visions than dreaming up new ones, having a good time, and looking fabulous while doing it. And also like Cruella, it succeeds with flying colors.
Cruellais in theaters and on Disney+ May 28.
Chrissy Teigen gets really real about 'period skin'Tomi Lahren is still on her parents' healthcare thanks to ObamacareNASA's new space toilet is successfully launched into space'The Crown' reveals first look at Princess Diana's wedding dressTreat yo' kids: 'Parks and Recreation' children's book is hereMacaulay Culkin wore a 'Home Alone' screaming mask and it was kind of creepyHow to parent without perpetuating gender stereotypesDonald Trump, famous for firing people on TV, is actually terrible at firing peopleNetflix adds section to promote new contentIn praise of going back to bed after taking a showerThe best politics podcasts: 9 shows that'll keep you informed and entertained5 questions Americans asked Google about the election this weekWhat is an Airbnb 'superhost' exactly? It has to do with hospitality, not safetyWhy the next presidential debate could totally be on Zoom'The Crown' reveals first look at Princess Diana's wedding dressGoogle rebrands G Suite as Google Workspace, gives Gmail a new logoAva DuVernay on streaming, empathy, and Lenovo's New Realities VRDad convinces Justin Timberlake to hold his baby Lion KingElection breakdown: What happened on Instagram Sept. 29Here are Trump and Scaramucci's scenes from that Wall Street movie 'Eagle Flight' is the best virtual reality game to date Pearl Jam and Tupac among nominees for Rock and Roll Hall of Fame Caramel M&Ms are coming to make your dreams come true Lady Gaga politely extinguishes the Chainsmokers' diss Khloe Kardashian DGAF about Donald Trump calling her a 'piglet' The tumultuous, tragic presidency of a towering Texan Listen to Lady Gaga's ludicrously catchy new song, 'A 11 things to watch instead of the final presidential debate 'Zombie drug' behind mass overdose in party town still not confirmed 3 scary moments you'll experience after you're laid off (even if you saw it coming) Why 'Something Wicked This Way Comes' is the perfect October read Breastfeeding mothers could soon have their own emoji Report: Surge of anti Google Pixel's are nice, but they're no Samsung Galaxy Sorry Tebow, getting your first hit doesn't make you a baseball player Wednesday's Mars landing could put Europe on the Martian map People are putting socks over their heels to DIY their own Yeezy shoes Black cat invades football pitch, delights Twitter You can listen to two of David Bowie's stellar final songs now Hannah Hart talks about her struggle with mental health in 'Buffering'
1.7156s , 10132.6796875 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【Street Stall (2015)】,Unobstructed Information Network