Watched this last night with some friends and we all gave it a big thumb's up (if you will).
There is so much to like about the film, from Fennell's direction to Kracun's cinematography to a very nuanced script and even another subtly great supporting performance from Clancy Brown... but make no mistake, this movie is carried on the powerful shoulders of Carey Mulligan in a performance so impressive I found myself wanting to win the lottery so I could start a studio just so I could make movies for Carey Mulligan to star in.
The movie did not do well at the box-office which was a real surprise to me when I looked it up. It makes me wonder, do neither women nor men want to hear this story? I obviously cannot speak for women but if the concern of men is that they would be attacked and preached at or whatever, as a man and a man who was "on the prowl" and such during my twenties and thirties, I can tell you this movie offended me not one bit and didn't upset me in the least for myself (though plenty for the characters involved), and I was not turned off by the portrayal of men in the film. The men are actually surprisingly nuanced... as is the whole film really. There is judgement and blame in the film, but fair judgement and blame; it was just really, really honest about the damage we do and how harmful some of our behaviors can be when we don't stop to think about the other person involved. The movie isn't preachy about it either, it just looks you dead in the eyes. And I think it's a great conversation to have. But I also think it was a damned entertaining movie.
One caveat to mention here for viewers is that this comes across from the marketing maybe as a pure thriller and it does thrill and even make you squirm at times but it is also a very thoughtful movie about damage and about our society but also about how the poison in your soul can also poison the people around you.
Really, we thought this was great, all three of us.
(I took off half a star because there were one or two ideas that were not as smooth as the rest of the film, though they did technically work as a part of the film, but I think we almost could have gone to five without those little things.)