The Girl from Plainville review – Elle Fanning doesn’t put a foot wrong in this questionable true-crime drama

The star of The Great is brilliant as the girl at the heart of a real-life suicide case – despite a shallow script and ethical concerns

The extraordinary story of the Massachusetts teenagers Michelle Carter and Conrad Roy III has already been told at least three times. Once in the news reports and lurid headlines that accompanied Carter’s arrest, trial and conviction for manslaughter, then – as is legally required in the US – a Lifetime movie and a meticulous, sober, brilliant two-part documentary by Erin Lee Carr called I Love You, Now Die.

That film laid out the case against Carter as the prosecution (and headlines) had written it. Carter had, over the course of thousands of text messages with her boyfriend, Roy – who was already prone to depression and suicidal ideation – persuaded him to kill himself. Halfway through that terrible event, he got scared and abandoned the attempt. She convinced him to resume it. It was, clearly, the act of a narcissist, a psychopath, a monster.

I Love You, Now Die then pulled back, canted the angle and looked at the rest of the story, painting a complicated, nuanced portrait of Carter and contextualising her relationship with Roy so that the simple “black widow” narrative beloved by the media became the tale of how a chronically lonely, mentally fragile girl who had been on antidepressants from a young age became involved with an equally fragile boy who had already attempted suicide more than once. She became increasingly desperate to stay important to him in any way she could. In the end, as one psychologist put it, she thought she was helping him.

The film didn’t have all the answers, but raised the right questions. It asked how ready we are to admit the endless convolutions of the human mind and how far they can be understood by outsiders . It queried the prejudices embedded in our institutions and the inadequacy of our laws. It pondered our collective ability to deal with the new and awful things technology can enable people to do to each other.

Now, there is a fourth retelling: The Girl From Plainville (Starzplay), an eight-part drama starring Elle Fanning as Carter and Colton Ryan as Roy. Alas, it is a much lesser affair, which collapses much of what the documentary covered into an unsubtle – if sympathetic – view of Carter as a drama queen who got carried away with herself. The outcome is painted as a sorry example of where toxic relationships can end up.

The performances are great. Fanning walks a series of fine lines – between normal adolescent intensity and delusion, between youthful egocentricity and narcissism, between love and need – with aplomb. Her Carter is just slightly, exquisitely wrong at every turn – too friendly, too close, too keen, too much. Ryan is deeply moving as a boy who cannot find a way out of the mental straitjacket his family dynamic and brain chemistry have put him into. Chloë Sevigny is exceptional as his grief-stricken mother, Lynn.

Perhaps the enterprise was doomed from the off by the essential interiority of the case. While the documentary was able to adduce outside testimony from psychologists and people who had read through the many boxes of printed-out texts between the pair and seen how they had evolved over years, the drama is hampered by the need to unfold in “real” time and only through the eyes of the people who were there.

A more avoidable problem is that the script – while better than that of a Lifetime movie, for sure – rarely goes below the surface. This story encompasses so much about modern mores, such as how we construct identities and the unique pressures on teens. But it also features timeless concerns, including the innocence of youth, its insecurities and the traps that sets. It needed a multilayered, evocative script that could give us more than screaming rows with parents, hard-nosed exchanges between ambitious lawyers set on creating a landmark case, and eating disorders reduced to secret chocolate-cake binges.

When you consider that this story happened to real young people (and will doubtless put the spotlight back on Carter, who was released from prison two years ago and has not spoken about the case since 2015, including at her trial), it doesn’t feel as though there is enough depth, insight or value added here to justify the endeavour.

In the UK and Ireland, Samaritans can be contacted on 116 123, or by emailing jo@samaritans.org or jo@samaritans.ie. In the US, the National Suicide Prevention Lifeline is 1-800-273-8255. In Australia, the crisis support service Lifeline is 13 11 14. Other international helplines can be found at befrienders.org

Contributor

Lucy Mangan

The GuardianTramp

Related Content

Article image
Karen Pirie review – this female-led crime drama absolutely sings
Humour, confidence and charm are perfectly blended in this suspenseful adaptation of Val McDermid’s bestseller. As its young female detective tackles a cold case it really belts along

Lucy Mangan

25, Sep, 2022 @9:00 PM

Article image
The Confession review – you’ll study every gesture in this true-crime documentary
Keith Hall confessed his wife’s murder to an officer wearing a wire – and was found innocent. This programme will leave you scrutinising his every second on screen to make your mind up about him

Jack Seale

25, Nov, 2022 @6:00 AM

Article image
Sisterhood review – an Icelandic crime drama perfect for Unforgotten fans
Just because it has one of the world’s lowest crime rates, that doesn’t stop Iceland from coming up with an ominous TV show about a killing in a town full of terrible secrets and spectacular monsters

Rebecca Nicholson

19, Sep, 2022 @11:45 PM

Article image
Unforgotten series five review – still cracking crime drama, even without Nicola Walker
The much-loved gaffer was killed off at the end of the last series, but Chris Lang’s show is as taut and tense and pleasurable as ever

Rebecca Nicholson

27, Feb, 2023 @10:00 PM

Article image
Showtrial review – will this schlocky murder drama really grip the nation?
Class tension, sex and politics are laid on thick in this five-parter about a high-profile court case, but the risk of an overbaked, overstuffed dud is high

Rebecca Nicholson

31, Oct, 2021 @10:00 PM

Article image
Crime review – Irvine Welsh’s first TV drama is a dreich and plodding affair
This Edinburgh cop show is disappointingly conventional stuff from the author known for his exuberance and excess – and its dialogue is deathly

Lucy Mangan

18, Nov, 2021 @12:54 PM

Article image
The Girl from Plainville: the unease of TV’s latest true crime hit
Series on the infamous texting suicide case searches for the emotional realism of digital relationships but flounders in a mishmash of prestige TV beats

Adrian Horton

07, Apr, 2022 @7:10 PM

Article image
The Hunt for a Killer review – Nordic noir nail-biter with a true crime twist
BBC Four’s latest import is a sensationalism-free reimagining of a 1989 Swedish murder case, which trades aspirational design and superhuman sleuths to look deep into societal woes

Ellen E Jones

04, Sep, 2021 @9:30 PM

Article image
The Great series two review – Elle Fanning and Nicholas Hoult return in TV’s most riotously entertaining show
Every line of the script brims with wicked hedonism, as this gripping period drama gets into its groove – and war rages between Fanning’s Catherine and Hoult’s Peter

Jack Seale

27, Jul, 2022 @10:05 PM

Article image
McDonald & Dodds series two review: far from dark – and all the better for it
Standing in stark contrast to the likes of Bloodlands, there’s both a lightness of touch and a neat precision to ITV’s chalk-and-cheese crime drama

Rebecca Nicholson

28, Feb, 2021 @10:00 PM