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Elisabeth Moss, Kate Hudson Sci-Fi Satire
TV & Streaming

Elisabeth Moss, Kate Hudson Sci-Fi Satire

by jummy84 October 6, 2025
written by jummy84

Editor’s Note: This review was originally published during the 2024 Toronto Film Festival. Republic Pictures releases “Shell” in select theaters Friday, October 3.

Some movies suffer because of bad timing. “Shell” wouldn’t be a very good movie under any circumstances, but it fares especially poorly against Coralie Fargeat’s “The Substance,” a better and more outrageous film that deals in very similar subject matter. “Outrageous” is what director Max Minghella is going for here. And when it accepts its destiny as a ‘50s-style rubber-suit sci-fi monster movie, “Shell” does have camp value to it. Even then, it still doesn’t commit to the bit hard enough to make it successful. 

Monster: The Ed Gein Story stars Charlie Hunnam as the actor playing Ed Gein, shown here smiling in the dark with his hand above his face

There are some funny moments in “Shell” — both intentional and unintentional — and some eye-catching images. The first living creature to appear on screen is a fluffy lap dog smeared with blood, which combines the two; it trots down a dark hallway in an ‘80s-style mansion, its little legs moving as fast as they can. The camera follows the dog into a retro tiled bathroom, where Elizabeth Berkley is sitting in a shell-pink bathtub wearing a matching silk robe cutting grotesque black bumps off of her leg. She’s freaking out. The tub is slippery with blood. She passes out and drops the knife, and the dog starts licking it clean.

It’s a promising cold open, one that leads into an uneasy blend of attempted pathos and tired entertainment-industry satire as Samantha (Elisabeth Moss) goes out for what she thinks is a meeting with the director of one of the downbeat indie movies Moss sometimes stars in in real life. It turns out to be an open audition, and Samantha loses the role — a divorced single mother of two — to “it” girl Chloe Benson (Kaia Gerber). Chloe is barely old enough to drink, let alone have two kids, but she’s hot and popular on social media so there you go. The experience leads Samantha’s reps (one of whom is played by Ziwe, perfectly cast) to suggest, their voices thick with smarmy faux-concern, that she go rest at the Shell clinic for a while. 

CEO Zoe Shannon (Kate Hudson) is the face of Shell, a company whose services blend elements of “Death Becomes Her” and “The Lobster.” In a spa-like atmosphere, people like Samantha can stave off their fear of irrelevance by undergoing an outpatient procedure where their DNA is fused with the DNA of a lobster, or something, resulting in a younger, stronger, taller version of themselves with clear skin and bright eyes. A lot is explained, but none of it sticks. The only things that land are the cutting jokes, which, again, are nothing new — did you know Los Angeles is a shallow and insincere place? — but get some chuckles in the moment. 

The satire here is clumsy, gesturing at similar points already made in better movies. There’s a rule in comedy that if you have to explain a joke, it’s not a very good joke, and a similar sort of ambiguity is at play here. It’s not always clear if, say, a montage set to “Walkin’ on Sunshine” after her Shell treatment improves Samantha’s life is a tongue-in-cheek parody of cheesy ‘80s movies, or if it’s just plain cheesy itself. This all ties into the camp factor, which could also be used to explain away hacky details like Samantha’s cat as a stand-in for her spinsterhood. Hypothetically. 

“Shell” also fancies itself body horror, but again it doesn’t commit hard enough to truly excel in that area. Samantha barfs up some black bile, and Zoe’s sycophants eat her skin at a dinner party in a bit that briefly frames her as a Christ figure but doesn’t go anywhere. Then there are the bumps that pop up when the procedure “goes wrong,” which are referred to in the film as “scales” but are more like the kind of lumpy mole that would prompt a visit to the dermatologist. A whole rash of them is pretty gross, but not as gross as it needs to be. Where’s the goop?

Mysterious pink liquids are injected into willing subjects from unlabeled vials at the Shell clinic, again shades of “The Substance.” Even the surface aesthetics of the films are similar: Both have an eye for ‘80s-inspired fashions and architecture, which manifests here in the form of silver lamé and curved lines. The heightened reality of this film is not as well constructed, however, and with much less intentionality: The self-driving cars that appear in the background throughout the film,for example, serve no particular purpose except to shore up its sci-fi credentials. 

Everyone in “Shell” lives in this reality except for schlumpy everywoman Moss, who feels like she’s about a half-step off from everyone else. That’s not a failure on the part of the actor, who has proven herself more than capable many times over. It is indicative of the overall clumsiness of the project, whose lack of consistency is present even in little details like that fact that some of the magazines in the film are real (Samantha is profiled in “Vanity Fair”) and others are not (ditto for Zoe in “Persons”). 

Hudson, meanwhile, does understand the tone Minghella is aiming for here, or is perhaps setting it herself. Her motivations for striking up a friendship with Samantha are inscrutable and predatory, and she plays the chilly villainess with relish as she struts around in fabulous gowns and purrs out pseudo-scientific bullshit. (There’s also the potential for a lesbian subtext to her relationship with Moss, but this is sadly underdeveloped.) Her perfection is supposed to make her hateable, and Moss’ imperfection is similarly meant to frame her as relatable. But pulling off that dynamic in a movie that also has human-sized crustaceans in it is a project for a more skilled filmmaker than this one. 

Grade: C

“Shell” premiered at the 2024 Toronto International Film Festival. Republic Pictures releases the film Friday, October 3, 2025.

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October 6, 2025 0 comments
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Netflix Sendup is Biting Satire and Big Fun
TV & Streaming

Netflix Sendup is Biting Satire and Big Fun

by jummy84 September 20, 2025
written by jummy84

At the end of Episode 1 of “The Ba***ds of Bollywood,” I cackled so loudly that I startled my editor.

That’s the premiere of Aryan Khan’s Netflix series which ends with the line “Say no to drugs,” spoken directly into camera as a deliciously cheeky reference to Khan’s own 2021 drug charges that led to nearly a month of jail time. Back then, even being the son of Hindi film industry royalty (Shah Rukh Khan) couldn’t help — but now, it’s given a voice to one of the most promising talents in Bollywood.

“The Ba***ds of Bollywood” follows the rising star of Aasmaan Khan (Lakshya), an industry outsider with a massive hit on his hands and offers rolling in left and right. In the midst of a precarious contract situation, he nabs a leading role with director Karan Johar (played by himself) and Karishma Talwar (Sahher Bambba), her first leading role as she inherits the legacy of her megastar father Ajay (Bobby Deol).

Jason Clarke and Patricia Arquette in 'Murdaugh: Death in the Family'

Khan’s prime directive is to subvert every trope of the industry he’s grown up in, even when “Ba***ds” leans into its filmier tendencies (action sequences and aesthetics in particular). At its best, the series feels like “Hacks” or “The Studio” or hometown comp “Om Shanti Om.” Bollywood A-listers clock in and out as heightened and hilarious versions of themselves, from a truly superb turn from Johar to drive-bys from Salman Khan, Shah Rukh Khan, Aamir Khan, Ranveer Singh, Ranbir Kapoor, and many more (my personal favorite is Episode 3’s outrageous guest arc). The industry functions on a delicate infrastructure of intimidation, backbiting, and the occasional contract amid endless favors, yanking Aasmaan through its machinations like a rag doll in the wind.

The BA***DS of Bollywood. (L to R) Bobby Deol as Ajay Talvar, Lakshya as Aasman Singh in The BA***DS of Bollywood. Cr. Courtesy of Netflix © 2025
The ‘Ba***ds of Bollywood’Courtesy of Netflix

While the story belongs to Aasmaan and Karishma, casting directors Karan Mally and Nandini Shrikent surround the two leads with a dynamic ensemble. That includes Anya Singh as Aasmaan’s manager Sanya, Raghav Juyal as bestie Parvaiz, Manish Chaudhari as mustache-twirling studio executive Freddie Sodawallah, Manoj Pahwa as Aasmaan’s uncle Avtar, and Mona Singh and Vijayakant Kohli as his parents. Singh and Juyal share most of Lakshya’s scenes but their characters have little to no identity outside of Aasmaan — a flaw that reveals itself in correlation with the series softening its bite over the course of seven episodes, shifting focus to the tension between Aasmaan, Karishma, and Ajay and its outrageous climax.

Through it all Khan demonstrates unwavering loyalty to his more-than-slightly chaotic voice, even when he risks disorienting the audience. This is not your standard hero’s journey, love story, or family drama, and complacency will drive that home even further. It’s also not particularly interested in finding the most palatable offbeat path; from cursing to sex to violence, anyone can find something to balk at as much as to laugh.

The same way this writer/director took a hard left from the on-screen career millions have assumed for him since birth, his own creation defies expectations and crafts something far more memorable than any lukewarm nepo debut.

“The Ba***ds of Bollywood” is now streaming on Netflix.

September 20, 2025 0 comments
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Venice 2025: 'Human Resource' is a Clever Modern Workplace Satire
Hollywood

Venice 2025: ‘Human Resource’ is a Clever Modern Workplace Satire

by jummy84 September 7, 2025
written by jummy84

Venice 2025: ‘Human Resource’ is a Clever Modern Workplace Satire

by Alex Billington
September 7, 2025

It’s time to get real: capitalism is going to kill us all. Most of the world is living in a capitalist hell, but we’re stuck in it and there’s not much anyone can do. The endlessly futile game of jobs, resumes, bosses, bonuses, time off, promotions, contracts, incentives, interviews, HR, and everything else that makes everyone cringe. There’s a trend within cinema these days with films subtly, slyly commenting on this capitalist hellscape, from Ruben Ostlund’s Triangle of Sadness to Mark Mylod’s The Menu to Boots Riley’s Sorry to Bother You to Alex Scharfman’s Death of a Unicorn, and everything else. The latest film to join the party is a Thai film called Human Resource, made by filmmaker Nawapol Thamrongrattanarit as his 8th feature film so far. It just premiered at the 2025 Venice Film Festival in the Orizzonti section, though it’s so damn good it really should’ve been playing in the Main Competition. What makes Human Resource unique is that it is a much more dour, depressing film following a woman in Bangkok who works at a company. However, it’s a hilariously bleak satire that makes Nawapol out to be Thailand’s Ruben Ostlund with a dash Roy Andersson.

Human Resource is both written and directed by Nawapol Thamrongrattanarit, set in the bustling, modern city of Bangkok. Prapamonton Eiamchan stars as Fren, a quiet, contemplative young woman who works in the HR department. “Fren closely observes people’s lives through interviews with numerous young new hires at her unjust company.” She also just found she’s pregnant, and seems to be entirely unsure of what to do next in life. What is the point of all of this? What is the point of bringing a child into this broken world? The film takes a bit to get going – at first it’s slightly confusing why we’re following this woman, or what the story will be, or what’s going on. But it eventually settles in and then things get hilarious. There are perfectly crafted ironical scenes straight out of a Roy Andersson film, and funny moments showing just how absurd and empty and pointless life is in this capitalist hell. Everyone needs work, everyone is desperate to keeping working, to make money – in order to go home & then do nothing, with empty lives where nothing exciting ever happens. Then they go to sleep, wake up and eat breakfast, and repeat this cycle over & over. To what end? As bleak and melancholic as this film is, I found my laughter getting louder & louder as it continues on.

By the end of the film I was ready to admit: this is brilliant, just amazing filmmaking. I loved this film, even though it’s painful to watch at times. I laughed way louder than I should’ve at some of the most unsettling shots (like the pile of ash). The fact that Nawapol is smart enough to show these images, to let the camera linger, in order to make sure it has an impact on viewers, is part of the brilliance. This is clever filmmaking. It’s extremely dark, yet exceptionally sharp, in its perfectly depicted sly criticism of the what-are-we-even-doing-anymore hell we all live in nowadays. I doubt it’ll wake anyone up from the delusions they’re living in. I doubt it’ll suddenly cause the world to stop being so obsessed with capitalism & corporations. But it totally slays anyway. As depressing and dismal as the film is, I still found plenty of joy in this expression of angst using cinema to make us laugh while we wince at this reality we’re all stuck in. Fren is superbly expressive in her subtle mannerisms that convey frustration with the world, and it’s a relief to spend time with a character who’s also just so fucking tired of all this. Sometimes a cinematic cathartic release is helpful. Sometimes it’s wickedly entertaining to see a filmmaker who completely gets it put all this on screen for us to reflect upon…

Alex’s Venice 2025 Rating: 9 out of 10
Follow Alex on Twitter – @firstshowing / Or Letterboxd – @firstshowing

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September 7, 2025 0 comments
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