☆ ☆ ☆ ☆
Anora (2024) – S. Baker
This is the fourth Sean Baker film I’ve watched and I
came to it a bit late, after all the hype surrounding its Best Picture Oscar
win (and the Best Director, Screenplay, and Editing wins for Baker) has died
down. I wasn’t sure if I was prepared to
like it, given the Cinderella story marketing frame, to which I only barely
paid attention, seemed a bit cliché. And, as the film unfolded, the blue-collar
erotic dancer meets spoiled Russian heir plot seemed just an opportunity to
show decadence on the screen rather than to explore any meaningful ideas about
class differences. But then the fairytale
plot evaporated and the intensity and stress racheted up, scene by scene, so
that this felt more like a Safdie Brothers outing (although I haven’t yet seen
their solo efforts) than the keenly/wryly observed naturalistic films of Baker’s
oeuvre (e.g., Red Rocket, 2021; The Florida Project, 2017; Tangerine, 2015). The
chaos and breakdown of relations between the characters is both comic and harsh
and although Anora (Best Actress Mikey Madison) remains the heart of every
scene, there are some excellent character turns by Karren Karagulian and Vache
Tovmasyan. Still, it was hard to tell if this was just a thrill ride for
viewers or something deeper – and then the final scene between gangster/minder
Igor (Yura Borisov) and Ani/Anora made the film for me. Not only did this
provide the necessary emotional release for the character but it revealed just
how many defenses had been up, perhaps for a very long time, as a protective
shield necessary in a hard hard world (even if the temptation to dream about
that fairytale might be omnipresent, if not fully conscious).






