Friday, March 25, 2011

Review: Sucker Punch

Sucker Punch
2011 (Warner Brothers)
Directed by Zack Snyder
Starring: Emily Browning, Abby Cornish, Jena Malone

Spoilers: Mild

Sucker Punch is the story of a young woman who accidentally shoots her younger sister with a bullet intended for her stepfather (he was trying to rape the girl). She is trucked off to an asylum for the criminally insane to be lobotomized. She spends the majority of the movie in a fantasy world where she and her fellow patients are sex slaves trying to escape their bondage on penalty of death. There is also a fantasy-within-a-fantasy where the women battle demon soldiers and dragons in fetish costumes.

It is rated PG-13.

Zack Snyder assembled five talented and beautiful young actresses to play characters with maybe eight thoughts and emotions among them. Baby Doll (Browning) wants to escape, and doesn't like to see anyone get raped. Rocket (Malone) wants to do whatever Baby Doll says, and is not fond of being raped. Rocket's sister (Cornish) wants to get out, but only if the odds are favorable. Amber (Jamie Chung) and Blondie (Vanessa Hudgens) play along and smile a lot, except when things go wrong. They all cry when things go wrong. Because they're girls.

The film lacks narrative momentum, and it is hard to tell what's really at stake. Rather than blurring the line between fantasy and reality, it simply rejects reality in the opening minutes, letting the vast majority of the events and struggles occur within Baby Doll's imagination. And her imaginary worlds looks suspiciously like a 13 year-old boy's masturbatory fantasies a lot of the time, with bad CGI thrown in as a bonus.

For a movie so obsessed with pornographic archetypes, Sucker Punch has a surprising lack of eroticism. For a story of female empowerment, Sucker Punch has an unfortunate amount of implied sexual violence and unchecked misogyny. For a film about the potential of the human imagination, Sucker Punch is unforgivably dull.


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