I'm suspecting dark comedies arenāt my thing. I just have too much difficulty realizing Iām supposed to laugh and I wind up āseeingā a different movie than intended. In I Care a Lot, this only matters so much. The performances are uniformly excellent. Rosamund Pike crafts a character so loathsome you keep watching solely in the hopes that sheāll wind up mauled to death by a mechanical bear while on fire. This plotās got the kind of twists and turns that make you squirm with uncertainty.
Marla Grayson (Rosamund Pike) conspires with doctors and retirement homes to place well-off seniors under her guardianship so she can leech all their assets. While exploiting wealthy retiree Jennifer Peterson (Dianne Wiest), she suddenly receives a visit from a lawyer (Chris Messina) who offers a suitcase of money to stop. When Marla asks for more, she learns the sweet old lady has someone powerful looking out for her.
The way Marla manipulates the system and takes advantage of others is sickening. If only she were dumb thereād be a chance of her getting caught - but she isnāt. Her scam is methodical, her allies as unscrupulous as her. The people sheās robbing are rendered utterly powerless. At first, youāre so appalled you keep watching to ensure your eyes arenāt deceiving you. Only in a capitalistās world could anyone be so evil, so adept at manipulation, have a dedicated girlfriend (Eiza GonzĆ”lez), a thriving business, and still want more.
For a while, you think the old lady will find some leverage on Marla, that this will be a commentary on the way we discard the elderly⦠but it isnāt. This is a different kind of thriller. Peter Dinklage (always wonderful) plays the antagonist. You almost - almost - feel sorry for Marla when you think about what's coming her way.
The flaws with the picture comes from writer/director J Blakeson - whose skills have improved so much since his 2016 film The 5th WaveĀ youād never guess they were helmed by the same person. He loves Marla and forces this tale to go a certain way. Maybe itās a testament to Peter Dinklageās charm or to Pikeās ability to appall, but you never think of them as equally deserving of the incoming hurt. I Care a LotĀ is dragged kicking and screaming to its logical conclusion, which makes you almost as uneasy as seeing a movie mid-pandemic about doctors and caretakers showing no concern for the elderly. Anywhere else, these faux-pas would be deadly, which illustrates how good this movie can get when itās good.
I Care a Lot gets going and never looks back. Audiences will be kept on their toes until they're left behind during the conclusion. There are great bits of dialogue, shirt-drenching tension throughout, and the performances are excellent. I donāt know if youāll love the movie or be unable to find anything redeeming in Rosamund Pikeās character but for her alone, it's worth seeing. (March 17, 2021)