Florence Pugh is, as expected, brilliant. Having to wear many hats, she takes Alice from contented, happy housewife who greets her husband with a drink on his return home, to charming hostess, to suspicious mind with a painted-on-smile, to what she becomes in the final third, with the panache of a genuinely unique talent. As she pulls on the threads of truth behind Victory, she helps create a tension that’s both unsettling and intriguing. You have never been quite so puzzled or drawn in by someone breaking an egg in your life.
Harry Styles’ style fits him for the part of overly-handsome, perpetually-horny young go-getter with an estate agent’s greasy charm, even if his Northern accent occasionally sticks out like that of Daphne’s mum in Frasier. He’s an irritating, smug git, but so’s his character and, helpfully, you’re not actually meant to like him too much. His hair is on-point, though.
The sex scenes, yes, they’re hot and everything, blah blah, but it’s in the plastic expression of imagined Americana that only ever existed in movies that the film’s style and flair really come into play. Victory is a weird, living museum of ultra-cool cars, kitschy dresses, thin ties, perfect hair and a banging ’50s soundtrack. It’s easy to get ‘too perfect’ wrong, but here it’s bang on without making it’s point with an oversized cartoon hammer. And the way it twists such normal, repetitive things like pouring coffee or preparing steak into something more stressful and increasingly hideous is masterful. The bits of outright darkness, meanwhile (no spoilers, but one involves cling-film) are genuinely unpleasent.
You’ll never guess the truth. But that’s kind of appropriate, given how obscured by distraction the conversation around Don’t Worry Darling has been (to a point where we have to ask, did anyone else not know Dita Von Teese pops up for a turn in a martini glass?). It’s a knife-edge thriller perfectly deserving of the volume of attention it’s earned, even if for reasons which are beneath it. Florence Pugh is right: this film deserves so much better than that.
Verdict: 4/5
Don’t Worry Darling is released on September 23 via Warner Bros