Report: Promising Young Woman
A Feminist Critique of Promising Young Woman (Scholars@UNH): This academic paper examines the film through the lens of power dynamics and gender, focusing on the "nice guy" stereotype and how society often dismisses female experiences to protect male reputations. Promising Young Woman
She could not bring Mia back. She could not solve every wrong. But she had learned, from grief and stubbornness, that resistance could be practical. There was tenderness in procedure, she thought—care wrapped in forms, policy, trainings, and conversations. She had chosen to be precise where the world was careless and found, in the margins, a way to make promises that outlived her anger. Report: Promising Young Woman A Feminist Critique of
The Female Gaze and Vigilantism: Subverting Horror and Thriller Tropes. But she had learned, from grief and stubbornness,
Perhaps the film’s most brilliant trick is its casting of Bo Burnham as the love interest, Ryan. Burnham is known for his intelligent, awkward, left-leaning comedy. He is, by all appearances, the ideal boyfriend. He walks Cassie home. He brings her soup. He respects her boundaries (mostly).
The film centers around Cassie Thomas (Carey Mulligan), a medical school dropout who works at a coffee shop. After a traumatic experience from her past, Cassie sets out to exact revenge on those who she perceives as guilty. Her targets are primarily men who have escaped accountability for their actions.
Cass read the thread and felt something like vertigo, a mixture of vindication and dread. She had not posted that alias. Whoever had created it had skills she admired: care with words, an ability to compile fact without spectacle. She suspected someone else. She added the thread to her ledger, and nonetheless allowed herself a small, bewildered satisfaction. Perhaps the world could be pried open.