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Hot Milk (Emma Mackey) (REVIEW) | Projector Shorts | A hot mess
Film Brain
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29/06/2025
Film Brain reviews this adaptation of the book, which despite the efforts of Emma Mackey, Vicky Krieps, and Fiona Shaw, has gone badly awry and become a beautiful but empty husk.
Category
😹
Fun
Transcript
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00:00
Emma Mackie sizzles in Hot Milk, adapted from Deborah Levy's 2016 novel,
00:05
but the film itself is a bit of a hot mess.
00:08
Set on the Spanish coast, Mackie plays Sophia,
00:11
who spends much of her time taking care of her mother Rose, played by Fiona Shaw,
00:15
who lives with chronic pain from a strange illness that keeps her mostly confined to a wheelchair.
00:20
But when Sophia encounters seamstress Ingrid, played by Vicky Krebs,
00:24
it awakens something fiery, even dangerous, in Sophia.
00:29
The film is the direct-to-all debut of playwright Rebecca Lenkiewicz,
00:32
who has previously written scripts for films like Ida, Colette, She Said,
00:36
and most recently The Salt Path,
00:38
but her writing in direction hasn't really translated the book to screen very well.
00:43
This is a story where all three of the main characters are damaged,
00:46
mostly stowing from traumatic events in their childhood that have been repressed rather than healed.
00:51
Mackie does solid work as the frustrated Sophia,
00:54
who has spent so long putting her mother's needs over her own
00:57
that she hasn't really developed, so Sophia is quiet but volatile,
01:01
and prone to bouts of jealousy and rage.
01:04
But the real standout performance is Fiona Shaw's overbearing mother,
01:08
but she finds some sympathy for her that keeps the character from becoming a stereotype.
01:13
Rose's illness is perplexing and exasperating, maybe even psychosomatic,
01:19
almost like a physical manifestation of a lifetime of slights and resentments.
01:23
And she's seeing a doctor play by Vincent Perez, who may or may not be a quack given his unorthodox methods,
01:29
like instructing Rose to write an enemies list over actual physical treatment.
01:34
But a lot of the novel seems to have been lost or discarded on its way to the screen,
01:38
like the film dropping the economic turmoil of the 2008 financial crash that served as a backdrop,
01:44
and echoed the tension of the mother and daughter.
01:47
And Lenkiewicz has taken a minimalist approach to her adaptation, amplifying its ambiguities,
01:52
but now it's so sparse and elusive that it's more off-putting than intriguing.
01:57
The book was written from the POV of Sophia, an aspiring anthropologist studying and questioning
02:02
everything and herself, but it's hard to get across that interiority in a film,
02:07
especially when you don't use voiceover narration.
02:10
I never felt like I understood Sophia, and Creeps' Ingrid is stuck with a poorly defined smudge of a character.
02:17
And despite all the heat, sweat and touch that's very sensual, this isn't really a romance,
02:24
nor did I buy it as one.
02:25
And as a dark coming-of-age story, the attempts to add a sense of threat to Sophia are too
02:30
intermittent and sporadic when it really should be building towards a boiling point.
02:35
The end result is a lot of pretty people in beautiful scenery doing confusing and inexplicable
02:40
things that you don't really care about, and I found it tryingly slow and empty.
02:45
Give up.
02:46
Give up.
02:46
Yeah.
02:46
I don't know.
02:46
I don't know.
02:46
Yeah.
02:47
I don't know.
02:48
I think this is so sticky.
02:48
Let's see.
02:50
I don't know.
02:53
Poki ish.
02:53
PokiI.
02:54
Well, there's 400.
02:55
Phen Mes.
02:55
Oki.
02:56
And we have just left it when it comes to Evangelical designed for the speed.
02:59
Here I am에.
03:00
Here we see.
03:01
How come back.
03:02
I think a lot of years found it in a place for the gravity.
03:04
Do you think that this is like a separate space?
03:05
Can you get what I have even somewhere else?
03:06
Where I was like, inbound?
03:07
Yeah.
03:08
I'm on deck of the highway.
03:10
There it was too big.
03:10
There's just awesome.
Recommended
19:24
|
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