"It wasn't supposed to be Germany Archiveslike this."
Those are the first words Jason Momoa utters in Sweet Girl, the new action-thriller from Netflix, and oh how prophetic they are. Just not in any of the ways you might expect.
Sweet Girlis a difficult movie to talk about, in part because the central mystery is fundamentally messy and haphazardly pieced together. Trailers have suggested it's a story about Jason Momoa's grieving dad, Ray Cooper, bringing his mighty punching fists to bear on Big Pharma after his wife dies of cancer in our broken U.S. healthcare system.
That's basically accurate. Amanda Cooper might have survived if she'd been able to receive a fictional cancer-decimating wonder drug, but the company that created it set a price that's far out of reach for the average working citizen. Worse, it seems that same company alsomaneuvered to block a lower-priced generic equivalent from reaching the market.
It's enough legalized criminality and basic injustice to send anyone over the edge. So when Ray starts in with a public death threat against the company's CEO and an at-home conspiracy investigation, it's a believable downward spiral. Even with his young daughter Rachel (Isabela Merced) in the picture, trying to pull her dad back from the brink.
"It wasn't supposed to be like this."
Rachel is the titular Sweet Girl, and she's the source of much consternation through much of the movie's two-hour running time. Why is this morally grounded young girl, who seems like she's on the cusp of becoming a woman, so devoted to her dad's increasingly dark, dangerous quest? And why is Ray letting grief turn him so completely into a rage monster when he still has a living family that needs him?
Sweet Girldoesn't spend much time pondering these questions out loud, or delving into its central characters at all, really. The story has a dark purpose of its own, and the script banks on viewers simply buying into an action-fueled plot that feels like a mash-up of The Fugitiveand Léon: The Professionaluntil all is eventually revealed. (And for what it's worth, all iseventually revealed.)
Unfortunately, the script from Philip Eisner (Event Horizon), Gregg Hurwitz (The Book of Henry), and Will Staples (Call of Duty: Modern Warfare 3) sacrifices too much exposition on the altar of its greater purpose. It just doesn't work. Sweet Girlis a mystery at heart, and truly great mysteries are propelled by rich characters and clues that eventually fall into place like puzzle pieces.
Some of those key pieces are still missing by the time the credits roll. There are multiple layers of villainy at work in the plot, but Sweet Girlnever does a clear enough job of peeling them back, opting instead to dump major revelations about what's been reallygoing on into the final 10 or 15 minutes. Ray and Rachel, meanwhile, are such underdeveloped enigmas that the story's emotional journey lacks teeth.
The real problem, though, is the twist.
Something happens about 90 minutes in that completely flips our understanding of Sweet Girlas a filmed story. It's a sharp turn on par with the Keyser Söze reveal in The Usual Suspects, except there's still a whole half-hour more of movie to go after the truth comes out. Even hinting at that truth here would completely undermine the impact Sweet Girlsets out to have.
I'm not going to blow up its spot, but it's still important to understand the impact of such a stunning turnabout. All of Sweet Girl's narrative flaws are a direct product of the big secret at the story's heart. It's not just exposition that gets sacrificed on the altar of some greater purpose; it's also basic coherency.
The writers clearly set out to explore a truly wild idea for a mystery, and to their credit it almost works. The late revelation and extended finale that follows are captivating in ways that the rest of the movie doesn't come close to matching. It's always fun to watch charismatic Momoa knock his way through action-heavy set pieces, but even that becomes secondary once Sweet Girlreveals herself.
The trade-off isn't worth it though. For 90 whole minutes — an entire feature-length movie!! — we're served a lumbering and increasingly confusing story involving multiple villains, a deepening conspiracy, and subtext-as-commentary — which fades rapidly into the background — on Big Pharma and the rotten U.S. healthcare system.
It's a heavy lift for any movie to manage, and especially one that hinges its success on a bonkers twist. Instead of letting Momoa and Merced's natural talents as performers carry us through to the big reveal, Sweet Girlopts for information overload and jarring bursts of improvised action as Ray, a blue collar Pittsburgh guy who counts boxing among his hobbies, takes on groups of men who have combat training and big, fancy guns.
Momoa's impressive physique may be handy in a fight, but it can't save us from an unmoored plot that doesn't build up enough of a foundation to earn its sudden 180. He and Merced, whose performance and presence is the real highlight of Sweet Girl, try their best. But the movie that unfolds around them has other plans, and they — just like us — are simply along for the ride.
It wasn't supposed to be like this. Ray knows it as police and FBI close in from all sides. But we who have seen his whole story play out know it, too. Sweet Girl's brazen attempt at mindfuckery isn't without its thrills, but those thrills depend far too much on a wild twist making sense in this misshapen mess of a story.
Sweet Girlcomes to Netflix on Aug. 20.
Topics Netflix
Previous:Goodbye, Pepe
Georgia’s Oldest Bookstore Turns 125What’s Better Than the War & Peace Miniseries?On the Isles of the Shoals with Celia ThaxterJean Debuffet’s Savage, Chaotic “Art Brut”A Loaded Deck: Bawdy Playing Cards from the Middle AgesLiving on a Tolstoyan CommuneRemembering Arnold Greenberg and the Complete TravellerLiving on a Tolstoyan CommuneAt the MetLet Me Entertain You: The Best Books About Throwing PartiesWhy Does the First Person Come First?Garrett Price’s “White Boy” Is an Unlikely Slice of HistoryComfort TV: Notes on “The Great British Baking Show”Ted Hughes in “The Fouled Nest of the Industrial Revolution”The Worst Thing for Writing Is EnvyCure Your Loneliness. Do the Twist.The Fine Art of the Armchair CookbookHustle and Trust: Notes on the Knicks (and Edmund Spenser)When Your Conscience Has a Headache: The Gossip HangoverLast Chance: Get a Free Copy of “The Unprofessionals” Standardized digital car key would work with iPhone or Android phones Netflix's 'Set It Up' is the throwback romcom we needed: Review World Cup fans are helping to pick up trash from stadiums after games Rogue hot dog gives Philadelphia Phillies fan a black eye People are texting Stephen Miller, the guy responsible for separating families at the border Snapchat's newest feature aims to create 'a world for your Bitmoji to live in' Avocados with twice the shelf life could be in your future Melania Trump's literally careless jacket roasted by late show hosts 'Gotti' appears to be posting fake positive reviews on Rotten Tomatoes People can't get enough of Louis Theroux 'Rick and Morty' co Apple will fix busted MacBook 'butterfly' keyboards for free California democrat with ties to AT&T guts net neutrality legislation Desperate Coinbase customers turn to SEC with allegations of fraud 'Last Jedi' director begs angry fanboys to remake movie: 'Please please please' Astronaut Jeanette Epps speaks out after being pulled from mission 'Super Mario Odyssey' now features porn, thanks to hackers You can book Aaron Paul's ridiculously gorgeous home for $400 on Airbnb ABC's 'The Proposal' is being compared to a 'Black Mirror' episode Google Measure app is available (but glitchy) on even more phones
2.6064s , 10130.7421875 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【Germany Archives】,Wisdom Convergence Information Network