Andrew reviews the long awaited new film from Nicolas Winding Refn.

During her first photoshoot she finds herself stirring the jealousies of competing models Ruby (Jena Malone as you've never seen her and hopefully never will again), Sarah (Abbey Lee from Mad Max: Fury Road) and Gigi (Bella Heathcote). Meanwhile she's torn between her goody two-shoes boyfriend Dean (Karl Glusman from Gaspar Noe's Love), a sleazy hotel manager (an underutilized Keanu Reeves) and a pretentious fashion designer played by Allesandro Nivola.
Returning to 2.35:1 widescreen, Refn and cinematographer Natasha Braier have transformed the Los Angeles modeling industry into a neon fluorescent urban wonderland with the aspiring young model Jesse (Elle Fanning) as it's unlucky Alice. On the surface it all seems like a glorious but dangerous netherworld where beauty and horror are at once inseparable and eternally locked in mortal combat. Reportedly certain sequences were shot at 60 frames per second in the rarely used 50mm, creating a hypnotic slow motion effect depicting glitter falling on Jesse's face. Aiding the glistening and at times stroboscopic images of course is Cliff Martinez's pulsating electronic score which sounds like a technological reworking of the soundtrack to Suspiria. Performances across the board are strong and go distances rarely demanded of modern actresses though the real star of this picture is the director who has now for the third time (the other two being Bleeder and Fear X) turned his own initials into a logo for the opening credits. From the get go, The Neon Demon is obviously an ego driven work but Refn's images are so insatiable even as they reach into the depths of Hell that you almost want to root for his exercise in arrogance.
Returning to 2.35:1 widescreen, Refn and cinematographer Natasha Braier have transformed the Los Angeles modeling industry into a neon fluorescent urban wonderland with the aspiring young model Jesse (Elle Fanning) as it's unlucky Alice. On the surface it all seems like a glorious but dangerous netherworld where beauty and horror are at once inseparable and eternally locked in mortal combat. Reportedly certain sequences were shot at 60 frames per second in the rarely used 50mm, creating a hypnotic slow motion effect depicting glitter falling on Jesse's face. Aiding the glistening and at times stroboscopic images of course is Cliff Martinez's pulsating electronic score which sounds like a technological reworking of the soundtrack to Suspiria. Performances across the board are strong and go distances rarely demanded of modern actresses though the real star of this picture is the director who has now for the third time (the other two being Bleeder and Fear X) turned his own initials into a logo for the opening credits. From the get go, The Neon Demon is obviously an ego driven work but Refn's images are so insatiable even as they reach into the depths of Hell that you almost want to root for his exercise in arrogance.

While the influences of Alejandro Jodorowsky and Gaspar Noe are indeed felt all throughout The Neon Demon, one worth mentioning is Roman Polanski and his film Rosemary's Baby. Not that there's any kind of demonic presence in the film, although that's open to debate, but just in the manner in which it chronicles the first person perspective of one woman's doomed journey scene after scene deep into an abyss of evil. There's a loose thread involving a cougar which breaks into Jesse's apartment early in the film and as her adversaries begin to sharpen their claws, Refn's camera can't help but pass by stuffed cheetahs and lions on display, as though the seemingly innocent Jesse has become a gazelle being relentlessly hunted down by a pack of hungry predators. By the end credits, Refn's Los Angeles modeling scene and it's inhabitants have been transformed from the idyllic and classy stiletto and black dressed fashion world into a no man's land of wild animals where the laws of nature dictate that only the fittest will survive.
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