Movies have been taking wild swings lately and I'm here for it. Megalopolis was a lovely mess, Joker 2 was messy without being lovely (but it took risks I guess), Terrifier 3 genuinely made me nauseous (I slept poorly last night because I also saw it last night), and now The Apprentice goes to some insane places. There are a couple of points where I wondered "are they allowed to show that?" I was shocked.
The shocking scenes generally have a purpose. I think the film's argument is presented without much subtlety, but I guess some people still think Jordan Belfort's cool based on The Wolf of Wall Street, so who knows. Then again, there is one very alarming scene in this though that feels like it's there to say unequivocally what the filmmakers think of Trump's character. It will be the most controversial scene. Will Trump sue? Has he begun that process already? There is also a lack of follow-up to that scene that left me even more uneasy and upset. I think that was the intent. Some people will not like it - people who both like and dislike Trump - and I wonder if it'll make The Apprentice this year's Blonde.
The writing lays things on thick in The Apprentice, and I don't think it quite knew how to end, but I otherwise found this engrossing. The three leads - Sebastian Stan, Jeremy Strong, and Maria Bakalova - are phenomenal. Juxtaposing Trump's rise with Roy Cohn's fall was an inevitable angle to take, but it makes for extremely compelling drama. It is a blunt movie but there is some nuance in parts that I think will provoke discussions and/or arguments. I don't always love provocation, but when it feels purposeful and is backed up with good filmmaking, I'm on board. This film's going to stick in my mind for a while.