Jennifer Lopez Is a Divine Queenpin in Hustlers


A Best Actress Oscar nomination for Jennifer Lopez? You better believe it. Her see-it-to-believe-it performance in Hustlers is that dazzling, that deep, that electrifying. At the Toronto Film Festival, where art films get the most attention, this glitzy true-crime knockout about New York strippers who take their drooling Wall Street clients to the cleaners, has been the talk of the town in advance of the movies national release this week. And for good reason. Hustlers promises and delivers a party-hard, wild ride. No one expected insights that pull you up short.

Writer-director Lorene Scafaria hits a career peak for scrappily adapting a 2015 New York magazine article by Jessica Pressler (a take-charge Julia Stiles using another name). The writer profiled a group of exotic dancers at Scores about facing criminal charges for scamming the men who treated them as objects for sale. Hustlers doesnt pussyfoot about what goes on in those champagne rooms off stage. The intent is not to exploit but to show how women manage to live and work in a predatory mans world. The question is control. And in Scafarias fiercely funny provocation of a film theres no running from the shadows its the women who seize control. All together now its about time.

This Week in Latin Music: Bad Bunny, Kali Uchis Wow at Pornhub Awards; New CNCOJennifer Lopez's New Song 'Baila Conmigo' Is Already a Hit in Latin AmericaFleetwood Mac's 50 Greatest Songs50 Country Albums Every Rock Fan Should Own

If you want to know what a stars entrance is watch Lopez take the screen as if by divine right. As Ramona, a dancer who can work a pole better than rivals half her age, she slithers and shimmies on stage (to Fiona Apples Criminal) with a jaw-dropping finesse thats as acrobatic as it is erotic. Dudes throw money at her. Academy members should follow by throwing their votes behind Lopez, who acts the role as well as she embodies it, finding reserves of feeling beneath a tough-cookie exterior. Aside from such early films as Selena and Out of Sight, Lopez has had to settle for being the best thing in movies that are indifferent or worse (remember Gigli?). In Hustlers, her talent blossoms into something that takes your breath away.

Even better, this time the movie is worthy of her talent. At a notorious Manhattan strip club, where celebs mingle with rich assholes of every stripe, Ramona is the queenpin to eager pupils played by the Riverdales Lili Reinhart, Scream Queens Keke Palmer and rap divas Cardi B and Lizzo in cameos you wish would go on longer. And as the reporter interviews the women, stories emerge that have the sting of reality not Hollywood. Still, the laser focus of Ramonas attention fixes on Destiny, a newbie that a stellar Constance Wu (Crazy Rich Asians, Fresh Off the Boat) invests with flinty vitality and a touching vulnerability. For Destiny, Ramonas blunt advice can be scary. Drain the clock, not the cock, says Ramona about the limits of fulfilling some dudes sexual fantasies.

Scafaria doesnt hide the fact that the job can be degrading. But she also shows us women some abused children themselves and others single mothers now being exploited by club owners who expect them to survive on tips they have to split with management. And when the 2008 recession hits, a plan is hatched. What if the women drug their big-spending clients with memory-blurring cocktails, max out their credit cards and share the profits with the club? Ramona rationalizes that these Wall Street wolves are hustling their clients on a way grander scale. As a movie, Hustlers walks a moral tightrope that can leave audiences queasy. But Scafaria is not in the judging business about strippers and sex workers. What she illuminates, with the help of a dynamite cast ignited by Lopez, is the sight of women in the workplace empowering each other. This you dont want to miss.

Tidak ada komentar:

Posting Komentar

Creed Bratton Dishes on Season Eight of The Office

A few months ago, Creed Bratton sat down with the entire cast of The Office to read through the script of last seasons penultimate episode ...