Movie · 2020 · Thriller, Crime, Drama · 1h 54m · R · English
Curator score: 6.2/10 (1M ratings)
Revenge never looked so promising.
Overview
A young woman, traumatized by a tragic event in her past, seeks out vengeance against those who crossed her path.
Ratings
Curator score: 6.2/10
IMDb: 7.5/10
Letterboxd: 3.67/5
Rotten Tomatoes: 90%
Metacritic: 72
TMDB: 7.4/10
Director
Emerald Fennell
Production
LuckyChap Entertainment, FilmNation Entertainment
Cast
Carey Mulligan, Bo Burnham, Alison Brie, Clancy Brown, Jennifer Coolidge, Laverne Cox, Chris Lowell, Molly Shannon, Connie Britton, Adam Brody, Max Greenfield, Christopher Mintz-Plasse, Steve Monroe, Sam Richardson, Ray Nicholson, Timothy E. Goodwin, Alli Hart, Loren Paul, Scott Aschenbrenner, Gabriel Oliva
Where to watch
Peacock Premium, USA Network, Peacock Premium Plus
Curator Review
Verdict
A sharp, provocative revenge thriller with candy-colored style, dark humor, and a deliberately uncomfortable edge. It’s divisive because it mixes empowerment, satire, and tragedy in ways that can feel abrasive, but the craft and cultural bite make it a standout conversation starter.
Best for
Viewers who like stylish revenge thrillers with a satirical streak
People interested in #MeToo-era stories and gender politics
Fans of dark, morally thorny films that spark debate
Audiences who appreciate strong visual design and tonal control
Skip if
You want a straightforward, cathartic revenge movie
You’re sensitive to sexual assault themes or triggering material
You prefer emotionally reassuring endings
You dislike films that are intentionally provocative and ambiguous
Overview
Promising Young Woman is built like a pop artifact with a poisoned center: glossy colors, needle-drop confidence, and a heroine who weaponizes the language of nightlife and flirtation. Emerald Fennell uses that surface sheen to lure you into something much harsher, a film about trauma, complicity, and the social rituals that let predation hide in plain sight.
Worth noting
What makes it so divisive is also what makes it memorable. It refuses the clean release valve of a conventional revenge fantasy, and instead keeps asking whether justice, performance, and self-destruction can ever be neatly separated. The result is messy on purpose, sometimes infuriating, but rarely dull.
Bottom line
Carey Mulligan anchors the whole thing with a performance that can turn playful, brittle, and devastating in a single scene. Even when the movie overreaches, it has enough style, nerve, and cultural specificity to justify the discomfort it creates.
Top Letterboxd reviews
mia lee vicino (2.5★) · 10934 likes
"I AM AWAKE IN THE PLACE WHERE WOMEN DIE." -- Jenny Holzer
been thinking about what to write about this one for the past couple of weeks. i can see why some hate it and why some love it, and after hours of reflection i've come to the earth-shattering conclusion that... it is just okay!
the title "promising young woman" itself is a reference to how the media called rapist brock turner a "promising young man." many know brock turner,… more
strida (1★) · 8767 likes
if anything is as disgusting and incomprehensible as rape, it's prison — virginie despentes
a sentient reductress headline, total con job, a “rape-revenge” movie where the cops will take care of things. this is the perfect thriller for the #metoo era, if u accept that metoo was instantly recuperated into an ineffectual marketing tool by a establishment that will brook no real threat to its power. Which it was
i was physically agitated sitting thru this and that was BEFORE… more
Patrick Willems (3.5★) · 7603 likes
The casting of every man in this movie is just staggeringly brilliant
Maria Luísa (0.5★) · 6850 likes
*takes a deep breath*
If the intention was to subvert rape-revenge thrillers, whose best quality is to allow women to externalize their aggression against the injustice of gendered violence, simply by taking the trope and removing the very thing that makes it relevant, what was the point? If this had been made by some white guy who thinks women dying is revolutionary, I’d have my answer right there. But this was written and directed by a woman, so I must… more
Lucy (2★) · 6653 likes
the outer layer is a bright candy coated shell, but peeling that back reveals the inside as hollow. i don’t have negative feelings about the ending (or the film as a whole) the way some do, actually i enjoyed it until it was almost over. but then the bad taste it left behind immediately started creeping in. as a complete picture it just feels like a bunch of gotcha moments that lack a certain kind of empathy for the subject… more the outer layer is a bright candy coated shell, but peeling that back reveals the inside as hollow. i don’t have negative feelings about the ending (or the film as a whole) the way some do, actually i enjoyed it until it was almost over. but then the bad taste it left behind immediately started creeping in. as a complete picture it just feels like a bunch of gotcha moments that lack a certain kind of empathy for the subject… more