204.
A Simple Favour
8/10
Onto another Odeon's Screen Unseen and this time it's a movie that I've heard of, seen trailers for and really fancied anyway. At the beginning of spotting this movie, it looked a lot more focused on the female audiences but after seeing some more trailers, there was something a lot more sinister involved within the storyline. Anna Kendrick and Blake Lively bring us two main characters that look totally opposite at times. Focusing on these two in the trailer may mean that there are no other sub-plots but it's a little too dangerous to assume that when it could be a storyline with plenty of twists. Let's get into it and find out whether it'll be a simple plot or go in favour of some brain-teasers. And yes, I am going to spell the word FAVOUR correctly!
Stephanie Smothers, Kendrick's character is a widowed mother on a young lad, who runs a vlog about crafts and food recipes. This time, the entry is different. She is pleading for her friend Emily who has been missing for the past 5 days and is overcome with emotion as she fills in all her new viewers on what's been happening. Emily who is played by Lively, on the other hand, is a PR director and a snobby bitch. Her son Nicky is in the same school as Stephanie's son, Miles. People don't really know much about Emily but with their two sons being best friends, Steph offers Emily for a drink sometime. They end up back at Emily's trading stories over some alcohol and Steph mentions that she slept with her half-brother when she was younger.
Emily expresses that she is disappointed with her own life. Her husband is no longer successful as a Professor and she is in a financial rut. That's hard to see with the size of the house!
One day, Emily calls in a favour for Steph to babysit Nicky as she has a work emergency and the husband is in London working. After two days, Emily has gone missing, her employer is called and they tell Steph that she is in Miami. We have already noticed that Emily hates having her picture taken, which leads to Steph sneaking into Emily's place of work and finding a picture in order to make some missing person posters. The detective on the case, Summerville, reports that Emily lied about heading to Miami, she rented a car and headed elsewhere. In one of her vlogs, Stephanie relays this information and one of her viewers finds the car abandoned. It's at a summer camp in Michigan, near a lake where Emily's body is found drowned.
Stephanie and the husband Sean, develop a bond through the grief and Steph even moves in with him and helps with Nicky. We can see her slowly turning into Emily, wearing her clothes at times and at the worst times too as the detective turns up to fill her in on some more. Emily's body was found with liver damage and an insane amount of heroin in the bloodstream. To top that off, the husband has taken out massive life insurance out on her recently. The plot thickens.
Just as the plot begins to thicken Steph receives a letter from someone who could only be Emily. It's regarding a poke about the half-brother story. This sends us into a cheeky flashback, recalling how Steph's husband confronted her on the suspected relationship, even questioning who the father was for Miles. The husband takes the brother out for a drive and ends up crashing, killing them both. Stephanie decides to have a look into Emily's past. Her name is Hope. Finding out that she is actually a twin to a sister named Faith, identical twins and instantly I'm thinking that it was Faith's body. An old artist, Diana, claims Emily to be a con-artist, who disappeared many years ago. Steph heads off to meet the mother, who explains that when they were 16, they set fire to a wing of their house. Meanwhile, in a café, Emily meets up with Sean, to his obvious surprise and lets him know that it was her that took out the insurance claim. She is now showing her evil side, even trying to tempt him into running away with her.
We see a transformation in Stephanie, who through cryptic messages on her vlog, lures Emily out of hiding and into a meeting. Emily does so, explaining her history. The fire was to kill their abusive father and the sisters split up, promising to meet at a later date but Faith never showed. Hope built a life for herself until 16 years later, Faith turned up, drugged up and threatening Hope with blackmail about the fire, which leads to her killing her own sister.
She lies to Stephanie about the insurance though, still claiming that it was Sean's idea. The movie then turns into some kind of jealous love triangle. Emily hates Sean's liking of Stephanie whilst Stephanie hates Sean's eagerness to get back with Emily. The girls agree to work together in order to frame Sean and help Emily reappear. Sean is therefore arrested but released on bail. Suddenly, Steph has a change of heart, like the crazy bitch she is becoming. She wants to frame Emily by staging an argument between themselves and Sean whilst some hidden microphones by the police record everything. Emily or Hope, whatever the hell we are calling her, is too smart for this and disables everything. Wanting to stage a murder-suicide, she shoots Sean in the shoulder and turns the gun on Steph. Little does she know, Stephanie has been wearing a hidden camera, sending the event out live onto her vlog. Emily does a runner before being mowed down by a car and arrested on her own driveway.
The closing scene of the movie fills us in on the characters now. Emily has been slapped with a 20-year sentence, probably out in 5 if this was real-life. Sean's new novel is a best-seller and he even has a decent lecturing job. Stephanie's vlog has hit a million followers. Still pretty low compared to birds who get with tats out really. She actually being turned in a morning show and part-time, she's loving life as a private detective.
The trailers were just like this movie, turning from what seemed like a 'chick-flick' to something a lot more sinister. It was a clever storyline, one that I didn't see coming at first but as the main parts showed clues, it started to get a little easier to guess the next play. That's until we got to the end and Stephanie frequently changed her own mind. I was a massive fan of Gone Girl and this seemed a film along those lines, just not as good. Lively and Kendrick gave a great effort during the movie, changed from normal-seeming women, to dark in their own ways. Keeping us gripped to their storylines and where they were heading to next. No-one else in the movie is really worth mentioning except maybe Lively as the twin, showing how she could play two completely different characters on the same screen at the same time. The movie was based on a novel and not one that I've read so claiming that it goes along the same path as that exact paperback, would be wrong but all in all, I'm happy that this was an advanced screening. If you like a good twist within a movie, no matter how big it is, I recommend getting your teeth into this one.