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[Lifestyle] Blink Twice review: 'Stylish and savage enough to gain a cult following'


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Zoe Kravitz's directorial debut is full of "smart ideas, contentious themes, cool images and striking sequences" – but does it work as a compelling thriller?

Zoe Kravitz is known for acting in The Batman and Divergent – and for being the daughter of Lenny Kravitz. But her promising debut film as a director and co-writer suggests that she could become better known for her new career. Blink Twice is a mind-bending black comedy-thriller about a young woman, Frida (Naomi Ackie), who is invited to join a tech billionaire, Slater King (Channing Tatum, Kravitz's boyfriend), on his private island. She and her best friend Jess (Alia Shawkat) can hardly believe their luck as they enjoy the fine wines, culinary delicacies and designer drugs that King and his courtiers provide, but, as the days and nights blur into one long indulgent haze, they realise that they are having mysterious bouts of memory loss.

It might help if viewers had some memory loss, too. As distinctive as Blink Twice is in some respects, it's unfortunately reminiscent of several films from the past couple of years. The most obvious one is the Knives Out sequel, Glass Onion, which had another untrustworthy, new-age-babbling tech tycoon treating his friends to a luxurious stay on his own island, and we've had plenty of other dark satires with similar scenarios, including Triangle of Sadness, The Menu and Infinity Pool. Beyond those, the too-good-to-be-true setting has echoes of Don't Worry Darling, while the mordant fable of an outsider being allowed into a bubble of ridiculous privilege even recalls Saltburn.

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There are also some marked resemblances to Jordan Peele's Get Out, which was released in 2017, but all the other films mentioned above came out in 2022 and 2023, so Blink Twice has the faintly stale whiff of a project that is past its sell-by date. It would have had to be truly exceptional not to seem as if it had come late to the party – and it isn't truly exceptional. Mind you, it sometimes gets pretty close.

Blink Twice gets off to an intriguing and wickedly funny start when Kravitz and her co-writer, ET Feigenbaum, establish King's back story in the most contemporary of ways: Frida reads news articles and watches interviews on her phone while she's sitting on the toilet. It turns out that his career was derailed when he committed some unspecified wrongdoing, but a few apologies and some ostentatious philanthropy have put all that in the past. "You really are a changed man," coos an obsequious interviewer.


Link: https://www.bbc.com/culture/article/20240821-blink-twice-review-stylish-and-savage-enough-to-gain-a-cult-following

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