Cruella review – Emma Stone is a joy as the refashioned supervillain

101 Dalmatians’s Cruella de Vil gets an origin story, with a sneering Emma Stone, an icy Emma Thompson – and clothes to die for

In 1996’s 101 Dalmatians, Glenn Close’s gleefully unhinged performance as a puppy-skinning fashion designer riffed on older audience members’ prior knowledge of the actor as a “bunny boiler” in Fatal Attraction. Emma Stone’s Cruella de Vil is much more grounded and thus not as camp, a supervillain with a believable backstory – born Estella, bullied by boys at school and established as a maverick who’s always refused to “follow the pattern” (as her single mother puts it) in both dressmaking and in life.

Set in 1970s London against a backdrop of the emerging punk scene, this playful prequel by Craig Gillespie (I, Tonya) is a fine feat of world-building. Like Phantom Thread or Marie Antoinette, it’s also an excellent fashion film, playing on the myth of the egocentric, detail-oriented genius. One of its main narrative threads involves Estella’s apprenticeship at, and eventual sabotage of, a couture fashion house headed by an icy narcissist named The Baroness (Emma Thompson, exuding Meryl Streep’s energy in The Devil Wears Prada). Fashion enthusiasts may also draw connections between the House of Baroness’s sculptural, Dior-esque gowns and Estella’s Alexander McQueen-influenced lace and leather looks (McQueen, of course, succeeded John Galliano at Givenchy in the 90s when the latter moved to Dior). There is even a reference to McQueen’s 2011 monarch butterfly dress.

The film is structured as a family-friendly heist movie that plays out against a series of costume balls. There’s probably one act too many and so the pacing suffers; younger children with shorter attention spans might, too. Still, Stone is a joy: vampy, sneering and as eager to please as a dalmatian.

Watch a trailer for Cruella

Contributor

Simran Hans

The GuardianTramp

Related Content

Article image
Cruella review – De Vil wears Prada in outrageous punk prequel
Aspiring fashionista Cruella is out for her boss’s skin in a riotous 101 Dalmatians origin-myth set in 70s London, starring Emmas Stone and Thompson in dynamic form

Peter Bradshaw

26, May, 2021 @1:00 PM

Article image
Emma Stone to play Cruella de Vil in Disney's latest live-action origins tale
Cruella will tell the story of the fur coat-loving fashion hound’s early years and looks set to follow the similarly pitched Maleficent into cinemas

Ben Child

07, Jan, 2016 @10:38 AM

Article image
Poor Things review – Emma Stone transfixes in Yorgos Lanthimos’s thrilling carnival of oddness
The director of The Favourite teams up again with the fearless Hollywood star in a funny, filthy and explosively inventive spin on Frankenstein

Wendy Ide

14, Jan, 2024 @8:00 AM

Article image
La La Land; Manchester By the Sea; Graduation and more – review
Damien Chazelle’s sun-drenched musical is even lovelier on second viewing, while Casey Affleck’s janitor evokes Brando

Guy Lodge

14, May, 2017 @7:00 AM

Article image
Alone in Berlin review – misfiring anti-Nazi drama
Vincent Perez’s film about subversion in wartime Berlin fails to be lifted by Brendan Gleeson’s stoic protagonist

Simran Hans

02, Jul, 2017 @7:00 AM

Article image
The Children Act review – flaws in Ian McEwan’s novel are cruelly exposed
Emma Thompson does her best as a high court judge called upon to make a life-or-death decision, but she can’t do anything about the preposterous plot

Wendy Ide

25, Aug, 2018 @2:00 PM

Article image
The Favourite review – Colman, Weisz and Stone are pitch-perfect
Yorgos Lanthimos’s tragicomedy boasts daring performances from its three female stars and lashings of lust, intrigue and deceit

Mark Kermode

30, Dec, 2018 @8:00 AM

Article image
Late Night review – talk show satire with Emma Thompson and Mindy Kaling
A comedy about a young Indian-American woman hired to write for a TV talkshow is likable but lacks real punch

Wendy Ide

09, Jun, 2019 @7:00 AM

Article image
Streaming: the best springtime movies
From the floral euphoria of Bambi to outright pastoral terror in The Wicker Man, cinema’s best spring stories are a heady bunch

Guy Lodge

08, May, 2021 @7:00 AM

Article image
Beautiful Creatures – review

Beautiful Creatures makes a credible bid to be the franchise that replaces Twilight, writes Philip French

Philip French

17, Feb, 2013 @12:05 AM