Current:Home > FinanceCannibals, swingers and Emma Stone: Let's unpack 'Kinds of Kindness' -BrightFutureFinance
Cannibals, swingers and Emma Stone: Let's unpack 'Kinds of Kindness'
View
Date:2025-04-12 09:43:46
Spoiler alert! We're discussing major details about the plot of the new movie "Kinds of Kindness" (in theaters now).
Emma Stone is back with another squirm-inducing curio.
“Kinds of Kindness” is the actress’ fourth collaboration with director Yorgos Lanthimos, just months after their freaky Frankenstein film "Poor Things" netted Stone her second Oscar for best actress. Clocking in at nearly three hours, the pitch-black comedy is split into three loosely linked stories, all featuring a core cast of actors playing different roles.
The most intriguing tale is the provocative middle section, “R.M.F. Is Flying,” which puts a deranged twist on the true-crime genre. In the roughly 40-minute film, a stilted police officer named Daniel (Jesse Plemons) is thrilled when his missing wife, Liz (Stone), returns after a research expedition gone haywire. But soon, Daniel starts to suspect that the woman in his house isn’t the real Liz, but an imposter. He begins to test her devotion: first, by ordering her to chop off her fingers and cook them for dinner. When she obliges, Daniel takes it even further by demanding that she cut out her liver.
Join our Watch Party!Sign up to receive USA TODAY's movie and TV recommendations right in your inbox
Need a break? Play the USA TODAY Daily Crossword Puzzle.
The mind-bending mystery stemmed from conversations between Lanthimos and co-writer Efthimis Filippou, who wanted to explore relationships and memory. “You can sometimes forget people that you love and you don’t recognize them anymore,” Lanthimos says. “At some point, I had written this little thing about a woman offering parts of herself to someone to show her love. So as we were discussing the film, we felt these ideas together made sense.”
Jesse Plemons, Emma Stone worked with intimacy coordinator for 'weird' sex scene
In the other two sections of “Kinds of Kindness,” Plemons, 36, plays a cult member and a submissive businessman. But he says Daniel was the character he felt least confident about taking on.
“He was hard to peg, which I really liked,” Plemons says. “He was really hurting at the beginning, and those feelings of his partner vanishing could have stirred up any number of things.”
The most cringingly funny part of “R.M.F. Is Flying” comes at the beginning, when Daniel invites his swinger friends Martha (Margaret Qualley) and Neil (Mamoudou Athie) over for dinner. Afterward, he awkwardly asks them to watch a homemade sex tape they made with Liz.
“He just wanted to relive the good old days. The simple times!” Plemons jokes. The Oscar-nominated actor says he was initially nervous to shoot the graphic group scene. “You know it’ll be a little weird,” he recalls. But on the day, “it was just the actors, Yorgos and the intimacy coordinator in the room. It’s inevitably a little uncomfortable, but the intimacy coordinator walks you through the conversations you need to have so everyone feels safe.”
The end of 'R.M.F. Is Flying' is meant to be 'ambiguous'
Raunchiness aside, the film’s gruesome images may prove challenging for some audiences to stomach. After agreeing to slice off her fingers (in reality: silicone replicas), Liz reluctantly decides to carve out her liver and serve it for dinner. The prop used in the movie is an actual animal organ. (“Pig or cow liver, I don’t remember which,” Lanthimos says.)
“R.M.F. Is Flying” ends with Daniel walking into the kitchen, where he discovers Liz dead on the floor, having bled out after attempting to extract her liver. The doorbell rings, and Daniel greets another Liz (also played by Stone) with a warm embrace. The final moments are left purposefully vague: Did Daniel gaslight his actual wife into killing herself? Or was that an imposter in his home all along?
“I don’t think there’s a wrong interpretation or answer,” says Plemons, who won best actor at Cannes Film Festival last month for his performance. “It can change from viewing to viewing – it even evolved for me while we were shooting. But for me personally playing Daniel, I had to feel like he was right and she was an imposter.”
For most of the film, viewers are in Daniel’s shoes watching Liz’s strange behavior: She struggles to fit into her heels, and ravenously devours chocolate cake (a food she previously hated). But as the story goes on, Liz grows concerned for Daniel’s mental health, and he becomes increasingly deluded. Viewers are left discombobulated and unsure of whom to trust.
“It really is ambiguous in that sense of, ‘Who’s right? Is it happening in their heads? Are they both right?’ ” Lanthimos says. “That’s why we found it an interesting story to tell, and allow people to ask themselves those questions.”
veryGood! (36)
Related
- San Francisco names street for Associated Press photographer who captured the iconic Iwo Jima photo
- When mortgage rates are too low to give up
- Hawaii governor vows to block land grabs as fire-ravaged Maui rebuilds
- 2 American tourists found sleeping atop Eiffel Tower in Paris
- South Korea's acting president moves to reassure allies, calm markets after Yoon impeachment
- Colorado fugitive takes plea deal in connection with dramatic Vegas Strip casino standoff
- Iranian filmmaker faces prison after showing movie at Cannes, Martin Scorsese speaks out
- The Killers booed in former Soviet republic of Georgia after bringing Russian fan onstage
- Civic engagement nonprofits say democracy needs support in between big elections. Do funders agree?
- When mortgage rates are too low to give up
Ranking
- Behind on your annual reading goal? Books under 200 pages to read before 2024 ends
- Apple agrees to pay up to $500 million in settlement over slowed-down iPhones: What to know
- Sea temperatures lead to unprecedented, dangerous bleaching of Florida’s coral reef, experts say
- 3 suspected spies for Russia arrested in the U.K.
- Meta releases AI model to enhance Metaverse experience
- 3 suspected spies for Russia arrested in the U.K.
- Maui fire survivors are confronting huge mental health hurdles, many while still living in shelters
- Lahaina residents reckon with destruction, loss as arduous search for victims continues
Recommendation
NHL in ASL returns, delivering American Sign Language analysis for Deaf community at Winter Classic
Key takeaways from Trump's indictment in Georgia's 2020 election interference case
A Nigerian forest and its animals are under threat. Poachers have become rangers to protect both
Britney Spears and husband Sam Asghari separate after 14 months of marriage: Reports
Newly elected West Virginia lawmaker arrested and accused of making terroristic threats
Federal appeals court upholds block of Idaho transgender athletes law
'Blue Beetle' director brings DC's first Latino superhero to life: 'We never get this chance'
A look at the tumultuous life of 'Persepolis' as it turns 20