THE HOUSEMAID : A QUIRKY MISFIRE

To begin with, a notice to all bookworms. THE HOUSEMAID doesn’t  come close to a faithful  adaptation  of

Freida McFadden’s best selling 2022 novel, foregrounding the easily digestible,  style-over-substance shlock that made the book such a viral  hit.The work by director Paul Feig and screenplay by Rebecca Sonnenshine keeps pulling out the rug from our narrative expectations,  through the Hitchcock elements,  and even the gallows humour, the intention of which is  to make the eyebrow-raising goings-on as suspenseful  as they are silly, is missing.

Even if this female-driven tale marches right up to the edge of horror,  it is more in the tradition of a 1940s style  melodrama  pitting two female stars against each other. The only difference  is it is on speed, a heightened  operatic ride in which the dynamics  between  the three main characters  are constantly changing  so that you don’t know  what has hit you by the time it ends.

Running over two hours,  the entire thing sparks when Amanda Seyfried is on the screen, and flails when she’s  not. Too bad it’s not called ‘The Housewife’.

Millie (Sydney Sweeney) arrives for an interview  for the post of  housemaid at a luxurious home where she’s  not exactly  grilled by hausfrau Nina ( a brilliantly nervy Amenda Seyfried) about her credentials. It’s clear Nina needs help to keep the house looking pristine, preparing meals, and for some occasional  baby sitting  for her seven-year-old daughter  Cece (Indiana Elle), and covering for her husband  Andrew (Brandon  Sklener) who has one of those incomprehensibly high-paying jobs in it where it’s never made completely clear what he does–its shorthand enough nowadays  to just say ‘IT’ and audiences  will sagely  accept any embarrassment  of riches, like with this film.

This couldn’t be more different  than Millies’ background which is fed to us slowly across the film’s runtime,  but at the very beginning  of the film we know that she’s  sleeping in her car and is in desperate need of both work and shelter.

As luck would have it, the Winchester residence  offers both, as it is a live-in position. Millie never expects to get it, but hey presto, she does. Nina shows her around,  explains the role to her a bit more fully,  and let’s her get settled in.

Millie slowly gleans that there’s a lot more in Nina’s background.  Nina is hiding a slew of secrets, many of which point to a very turbulent,  dangerous past which threatens to spill out into the present. The thing is the same could be said about Millie.

The film includes ideas about the great precariousness  of living in America,  even if even if it leads up to unlikely conclusions.

Certain people  in the film live very unstable lives; the wealthy forget these people are there, or else they luxuriate  in the cosy certainty  that they call all the shots. At least, right up until they find out that they don’t.

The film’s cathartic even if cartoonish  redress of this unfairness,  particularly  as it impacts  upon women  and women’s lives.(If that means a rather implausible  veneer  of solidarity  at key points),  then you can deal with it because  by this point the film has shifted gears, ending as something quite fantastical  and even grisly,  which by the way sees Sweeney  growing  into the role, and its good to see these actresses playing such quirky roles.

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