Score: 3.5 / 5
Gorgeously shot in black and white, Malcolm & Marie belongs to the great tradition of "dinner party gone wrong" dramas. It of course pioneers a few new variations on the genre, and in these it brilliantly succeeds. First, it features only actors of color. Second, there are only two characters in the film. Third, it was one of (if not the) first feature film created and released during the COVID-19 pandemic, and though it's not part of the plot, we feel the effects of isolation, paranoia, resentment, and loneliness pervading the movie. As the two characters talk, tired and hungry and eager to unburden their souls, they shift from space to space around the house in various states of undress. Their desires for each other are often eclipsed by desire for themselves, the end result looking something like a ballet of titanic proportions as they verbally assault each other until there is nothing left to say.
What's it all about? Malcolm (John David Washington of BlacKkKlansman, Tenet) is a writer-director whose new film just premiered. He's riding a high from the emotional audience response, and he wants to celebrate with his girlfriend. Well, he also wants to pontificate ad nauseam about film critics. It's sincere, and quite funny to hear when it's not grating, but it also reveals intense insecurities in his mind. Marie (Zendaya of The Greatest Showman and the MCU's Spider-Man movies) has been supportive all night and does not want to start a fight, but feels slighted for not having been thanked or even mentioned in Malcolm's premiere speech. She's mostly quiet at the outset, but you can see her begin to seethe when she lights up her first cigarette. It's simple but significant, and the two begin what will prove to be an exhaustive argument that will stretch late into the night.
It's mostly significant, as we learn through their dialogue, because Malcolm appears to be using Marie for dramatic inspiration, pirating her life and turning it into his grand works of art. He constantly strokes his ego, pretentiously parading his brilliant mind in circles around the flock of vulture-like critics, who have notably not yet descended. He's insulating himself against their attacks, but Marie knowingly lets him dig his own grave, as she feels like the carrion he himself has feasted upon, without so much as a public acknowledgement. But in many ways, and because it's all coming from writer-director Sam Levinson, it also feels a bit like a manifesto from someone we don't fully know and therefore can't fully appreciate.
The potential problem with this movie is that, even before the halfway point, it all begins to feel like a writer playing with himself, rather than two distinct and rounded characters squaring off at home. His masturbatory tirades against critics are intelligent and articulate, but Levinson is showing his hand in a surprisingly aggressive way in only the first half hour of the film. Even when things veer into more personal, emotional territory, as the characters engage in a full-blown domestic about their history, it feels like their dependency on each other prevents us from seeing them as separate people. Much like other recent works have explored (Let Them All Talk and The Wife come to mind), this is about an artist -- here a man -- using the women around him in his work without thanking them, and becoming so deluded in his own genius that he isn't even always aware of his own vampirism.
But Levinson's movie stretches on through new evolutions of the same fight, and it does indeed become repetitive in increasingly exhausting ways. How many ways can these characters rephrase their grievances? Always one more, according to the writer, who nevertheless has worked into his screenplay a very clever means of deflecting his own critics. Their fight becomes a series of monologues, as one character rests before returning to the microphone; the performances are masterful, and we can certainly hope that this role will land Zendaya some leading parts in serious fare in the future. But frankly, this screenplay could have used some workshopping to make it more cinematic. Levinson as director is fine, and the movie is beautiful to behold. But the screenplay, as it is, would probably work better on stage than on film. It would still need some work, though, if only to increase the dynamism of its scope and its seriously confounding pace.