Second Ridley Scott movie of 2017. A film I've had waiting on Sky since we first got it installed back in July of last year.
What I enjoyed
The performances honestly blew me away. Susan Sarandon is always fantastic and doesn't seem to have aged in 25 years! Just a tough as nails bad ass, with a prickly brutal delivery throughout. Geena Davis as the young firebrand - emotional, constrained by her husband's negligence, like a puppy off the leash on the run. What actually happened to her as an actress? She was a huge deal in the early 90s but today just seems to have big TV roles here. I'd love to see her do more Julianne Moore-esque roles today. Supporting cast brought their A-game too - Brad Pitt, a properly grimy performance from Christopher McDonald and not one but two Reservoir Dogs. All of them felt rounded, purposeful but allowed the female leads to shine. Great stuff.A classic American road movie, in every sense. Music, locations, pacing, Southern drawls. The twangy 90s guitar, sounding every bit like a Billy Ray Cyrus video. Dust covered covered roads, cheap motels, gas stations and the open road - a 90s western. The film didn't slow down, building with such pace to the iconic dramatic crescendo. I love a movie that ISN'T epic... it lets you know characters as they are, give them time to breath in the moment, which this really did. The story, increasingly manic as the characters, accepting their fate relax further and further... loved it. All top off by authentic, deep South accents, charm personified.
Bechdel test smashed. Real simple - 1. the movie has two women in it. 2. who talk to eachother 3. about something besides a man. This story is all about the women. Escaping the men, who in their own way all way are all looking to control Thelma & Louise, for the women to somehow fix or complete them. But as the film develops, it's really a story of them letting go of these men. Whilst there is a lot of lust or wanting (I'd argue very little love) the women only really come alive when they abandon their masculine anchors.
The scene with the cop... where Thelma finally steps out of the shadow, asserting herself as the real badass of the pair. Perfectly scripted, perfectly played, perfectly shot. And damn funny. The scene before too, where the dynamic between the two leads really shifts, pitches the shift with such emotional subtlety. I love how Thelma's costume evolves with her character, almost like a wrestling heel turn! From girl next door white dress with hair flowing down in the opening section, to white trash confederate skull and cross bone t-shirt wearing fugitive in the finale.
What didn't quite work
Camerawork at times, felt a bit tight. This did work for the story, which is meant to be personal, deep and so keeping the camera close makes sense. For me though... let the open road shout! I wanted huge vistas, sweeping shots as they drive through the desert. And whilst there were some, these were not plentiful enough for my Americana loving tastes.Touches of 90s sentimentality don't really work form me. The soundtrack at times had a bit too much schmultz. I'd have been happy with it being pure twang and slide. There's also moments where the dialogue drifts into emotional exposition - sometimes things that are obvious are better left unsaid. Definitely a picture of it's time though, which also explains why every other background character seemed to be dressed as Axel Rose.

