Year of Release: 2024
Director: Ti West
Starring: Mia Goth, Elizabeth Debicki, Giancarlo Esposito, Michelle Monaghan, Bobby Cannavale, Simon Prast, Kevin Bacon, Sophie Thatcher, Lily Collins, Moses Sumney, Halsey, Chloe Farnworth, Albert Kong, Taylor Kowalski, Pegah Rashti, Deborah Geffner
Genre: Crime, Horror
Score out of ten (whole numbers only): 6
Watch it on Amazon
Synopsis and Review
Following the critical success of "X" and "Pearl", writer/producer/director Ti West returns with what is supposedly the caper of this series of films. Following the events that took place in "X", Maxine Minx is now in Los Angeles where she has become a well known adult film actress. We first encounter her on a casting/audition where she's going for the lead role in celebrated director Elizabeth Bender's new film. She's trying to crossover to legitimate films, and she sees this is as her big break. In the meantime, Los Angeles is under fire with the cloak of the Night Stalker murders highjacking everyone's attention and frightening everyone. Maxine who also works at a live peep show, gets an invite from another performer to go to a party up on the Hollywood Hills. Amber and Tabby, both adult entertainers and friends of Maxine are killed, and two LAPD detectives, Williams and Torres, question her about her knowledge of where they were going and who were they interacting with. Maxine in the meantime is tracked by a private detective who mentions his knowledge of what happened a few years back when she and her friends tried to make an adult film, which resulted in multiple deaths and her being the sole survivor. Maxine decides to confide in her agent of what is happening, and he reassures her all she has to think about is her next big break, since he will take care of everything else. The private detective by the name of Labat, is the first one to be tackled.
One of the most interesting things about "Maxxxine" is how Ti West manages to vividly bring to mind the artful environment of some of the most interesting (and B-movie inspired) films of the 80s, namely Brian De Palma's "Body Double" and William Friedkin's "To Live and Die in LA". The influences of these films are heavily felt, which has its positive aspects in terms of context and environment definition, but also steal "Maxxxine" itself from a personality of its own. The film is almost too referential, and too restrained for its own good (the film at times also brings to mind episodes of Anthony Yerkovich's "Miami Vice"), begging for some bursts of a point of view of its own, a bit like Nicolas Winding Refn has been doing with some of his feature films. The characters are not as vividly captured this time around, as they were on the prior films of this series. Maxxxine in particular comes across more one-note than previously, whereas the supporting characters don't have much nuance, aside from the private detective portrayed by Kevin Bacon, who feels at home here and even on any noir (even on Curtis Hanson's "LA Confidential"). The central character needs more of a jolt of energy, similar to what the wonderful Nancy Allen created in Brian De Palma's "Dressed to Kill". As it is, Mia Goth for all her talent creates a darker version of Maxine, that transpires into the whole energy of the film. The supporting cast is uniformly solid, with Elizabeth Debicki, Giancarlo Esposito, Michelle Monaghan, Bobby Cannavale, and the always fantastic Kevin Bacon, providing superb support and bringing the characters to as much as life as possible. The production team is solid, including Eliot Rockett's cinematography, Jason Kisvarday's production design, and Mari-An Ceo's costume design. It's an entertaining film and one worth watching, but not as indelible as the prior films in the series.
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