Review by
John Bennett
Directed by: Boots Riley
Starring: Lakeith Stanfield, Tessa Thompson, Jermaine Fowler,
Armie Hammer, Danny Glover, Steven Yeun
America is in something of a gilded age at the moment. Without getting
too preachy or wonky, one could see how the GOP’s tax cuts have
disproportionately benefitted
a tiny, already-rich-and-powerful portion of the population. Other perceptive writers have made convincing arguments that
the U.S. does a pretty pitiful job of prosecuting white-collar crime. Given that these social circumstances significantly hamper equality of
opportunity in the States, it’s encouraging that a daffy piece of cinéma
engagé like Boots Riley’s Sorry to Bother You has the
legs to reach a wide audience.
Riley’s debut feature is an Orwellian farce whose serious, relevant ideas are wittily disseminated via a playful style and an inventive narrative. If a little more attention had been paid to the organisation of its somewhat scattershot second half, Sorry to Bother You would easily be one of the finest films of 2018. As it stands, Riley’s film is an entertaining, socially minded curio that - while falling just short of brilliance - is certainly worth seeking out.
Cassius’ luck begins to change when he gets a job making sales cold-calls at a telemarketing firm, whose mantra constantly admonishes employees to “stick to the script.” With the help of an older employee (Danny Glover), Cassius quickly rises through the ranks of the banal (yet mysterious) company until he reaches the professional pinnacle of “power seller.”
Any brief description of Sorry to Bother You’s complicated story cannot adequately convey the unique strangeness of the
film’s tone and imagery. The dystopia that Riley has created is uncanny in
its resemblance to contemporary life. Not unlike Alex Cox’s
Repo Man, Sorry to Bother You only relies on the slightest sci-fi
variations on contemporary life. What’s more, these variations are not (for
the most part) governed by sets of contrived rules and gimmicks - the kinds
that sap so many dystopian films of their mystery and menace. Riley achieves
this tone in Sorry to Bother You by peppering Cassius’s story
with moments of surreal originality and wit. Detroit’s many pairs of large
earrings - most of which tell little political riddles in big blocky text -
are lovingly singled out in ethereal close-ups, as if they were not designed
but rather magically appeared to serve as enigmatic meta-commentaries on the
film’s story at any given moment. In humorous moments reminiscent of
Repo Man’s creepy televangelist, Sorry to Bother You fleetingly shows
us moments of a popular TV show entitled “I Got the Shit Kicked Out of Me,”
a hilariously low-budget game show that subtly underscores the
desensitisation to atrocity from which the world of
Sorry to Bother You appears to suffer.
These kinds of touches, along with many others, accomplish two great feats. First, such details deftly level swift stinging attacks on a culture where almost everything (and everyone) is for sale, no matter the ramifications. Second, they help to construct a cinematic world that’s consistently funny and surprising without condescending or straining to gratuitously spell everything out to an audience.
Unfortunately, Sorry to Bother You doesn’t fully sustain
all of its strengths. In its second half,
Sorry to Bother You loses a bit of its satirical bite due to
the erosion of some of the things that made the first half so exciting:
its politics become more heavy handed, its story organisation becomes more
slack, and its mysterious aura fades slightly. There’s a major twist at
the beginning of the film’s last act (whose details I’ll refrain from
discussing here) that involves Cassius and Steve Lift. The twist, while
shocking, comes out of left field and hijacks much of the rest of the
film’s narrative, knocking its inventive world slightly off its axis. This
has consequences for other moments in the film as well. Eventually, the TV
show “I Got the Shit Kicked Out of Me” transforms from a funny dystopian
tone-setter to a slightly contrived plot point whose former comedic
litheness becomes bogged down by its attempts to be brute-force.
Without a doubt, Riley has a lot of talent as a filmmaker. Crucially, he
has assembled a solid team to deliver this mostly-solid debut. Stanfield’s
hangdog performance allows us to empathise with both his initial financial
plight and his subsequent moral dilemma. As the film’s moral compass,
Thompson is radiant and likeable (even when she, too, has her moments of
inner conflict). In supporting roles, the perennially winning Glover and
exceptional Steven Yeun lend their comedic abilities to the film as
pro-union employees of the soul-sucking telemarketing firm.
Doug Emmet’s playful, colourful cinematography enhances the film’s
otherworldliness. In the future, if Riley is able to continue to draw out
great work from a great team, and if he is able to retain his capacity for
humour, invention and social commentary while clarifying his storytelling,
his next project may be even more exciting.
Sorry to Bother You is on Netflix UK now.