There’s a nice custom within the teen film style of adapting esteemed works of literature and transplanting their tales right into a high-school setting. On the floor, Jennifer Kaytin Robinson’s Do Revenge seems to be one other entrant in that canon. The bones of its premise are plucked from Patricia Highsmith’s thriller Strangers on a Practice, twisting that story’s model of the so-called excellent crime: Two folks, unconnected besides by an opportunity encounter, committing murders on one another’s behalf. However the relationship between Robinson’s movie and Highsmith’s novel, and even Hitchcock’s 1951 film model, does not actually transcend the logline. As a substitute, Do Revenge cultivates that façade to get nearer to its actual adaptational curiosity — teen motion pictures. 2010’s Simple A performed this sport, too, however whereas that movie’s references are styled as playful winks to the viewers, Robinson cannibalizes the previous as a strategy to converse to the current, tastefully mixing tropes, aesthetics, and sensibilities of earlier a long time with these of right now to create one thing that feels prefer it belongs to the 2020s.
Do Revenge opens with the catastrophic finish to Drea’s (Camila Mendes) junior yr. Prime of the social meals chain on the preppy Ivy-feeder Rosehill, which she attends on a scholarship, she is dealt a significant blow when a revealing video made for her boyfriend Max (Austin Abrams) finally ends up leaked to the entire college. Her try and deal one again, punching her now-ex within the face in entrance of everybody, backfires, and he or she’s positioned on probation for the yr that may make or break her dream to attend Yale. Enter Eleanor (Maya Hawke), a rich social outcast who’s nearly to switch to Drea’s college, and who attends the tennis camp the place Drea works her summer season job. After studying of her plight and leaping on an opportunity to supply a trip when her automobile breaks down, Eleanor shares that she, too, is aware of what it is wish to be ruined. When she was 13, a Rosehill classmate of Drea’s, one Carissa Jones (Ava Capri), outed her at a day camp by falsely claiming Eleanor tried to kiss her by pressure, an expertise that has left lingering psychic scars. Returning for the autumn semester solely deepens their respective grudges, till they work out the proper path to consequence-free catharsis — “staff up and do one another’s revenge.“
Whereas this film is powered by its twisty, revenge-thriller narrative engine, which is powerful even with its have-cake-and-eat-it-too method to the third act character arcs, a lot of the enjoyment of watching it comes from experiencing its synthesis of previous and current. On the one hand, Do Revenge feels very present. It’s numerous and socially acutely aware, making be aware of variations in race, class, sexuality, and gender id, and their respective impression on one’s social capital, with no sense of cultural taboo. It takes the problems of the #MeToo motion as a central theme, and its “large man on campus” is extra of a Timothée Chalamet kind than the sports activities staff captains of yore. It sports activities a quippy, meta humorousness, incorporates text-message bubbles into the mise-en-scène, and, sure, is stuffed with Easter eggs.
Nevertheless it additionally goes to nice lengths to evoke standout teen motion pictures of previous eras, in a manner that is greater than only a sport of spot-the-reference. It is much less the viewer noticing that Drea’s putting, ever-changing outfits are an homage to Clueless, however that, via Robinson’s confectionary visible type and the makeover dynamic between Drea and Eleanor, the film typically feels like Clueless. Or Heathers. Or Imply Women. Do Revenge brazenly channels its generic forebears not as a cynical nostalgia cash-in, however to interact with media the way in which one does within the streaming period. Take this film’s soundtrack: As is typical of the style, Do Revenge makes use of music as a strategy to keep rooted in a particular time and place, and needle drops of such latest hits as Olivia Rodrigo’s “Brutal” and Billie Eilish’s “Happier Than Ever” are deployed to nice impact. But additionally sprinkled all through are plenty of songs from the ’90s, and their presence within the soundscape feels simply as pure. Rising up with an inexhaustible library of tradition at one’s fingertips means by no means fairly shaking the affect of the media that got here earlier than, and in Do Revenge, teen film references work to recreate that feeling.
In fact, the hazard of invoking nice motion pictures is that it always invitations comparability (Simple A, for one, bites off a bit extra of Ferris Bueller’s Day Off than it may possibly chew). Do Revenge principally manages to emerge unscathed by being so dedicated to constructing its personal factor from the combination, however seeing the ghost of Heathers makes one want the satirical critique was a bit extra biting. Nonetheless, Robinson’s movie shouldn’t be with out issues to say, and the mixture of a dialed-up Mendes and a dialed-in Hawke make receiving that message a enjoyable, engrossing expertise. It’s, in different phrases, precisely what it got down to be, and optimistically, it’s going to be named alongside the titles it so admires on many a teen film listicle to come back.
Do Revenge started streaming on Netflix Friday, September 16. The movie is 118 minutes lengthy and is at the moment unrated.