Phantom Thread (2017)

7.4/10
90/100
91% – Critics
71% – Audience

Phantom Thread Storyline

It’s the 1950s. Confirmed bachelor Reynolds Woodcock is a famed London couturier, clothing the rich and famous. His business is a one man show on the design side. His genius can only be achieved within an environment which he controls to his complete sensibility. On the business side is his spinster sister, Cyril Woodcock, who maintains order within the household to allow Reynolds to work within his controlled environment. She will, however, not allow anything or anyone to upset the apple cart, including Reynolds losing sight that it is a business, and not just a means to design and create fashions solely for his own satisfaction without regard for the clients. That balance in their work/live relationship has the potential to take a turn when Reynolds meets waitress Alma Elson. She not only becomes his muse but his assistant and lover. The entrance of Alma into Reynolds’ life and thus the business changes the balance between Reynolds and Cyril, especially as Alma has her own sensibility of herself in Reynolds’ life and in his business, which is often at odds with that control that Reynolds and Cyril have worked so hard to create and maintain.

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Phantom Thread Movie Reviews

A most unusual romance

In early 1950’s Britain, Reynolds Woodcock (Daniel Day-Lewis) is the most sought-after dress designer among the rich and powerful. He lives a regimented, almost monastic life, with his watchful sister Cyril (Lesley Manville) as his close associate. One day Reynolds meets waitress Alma (Vicky Krieps) and takes her on as his muse, model, lover, whatever he needs. Alma learns that she’s not the first to fill this position in Reynolds’ life, but she becomes determined to be the last.

I could care less about the fashion world or Haute Couture, and yet I still was drawn into the single-minded obsessive artistry of Reynolds’ world, his strict discipline and pursuit of perfection within his chosen field. Alma acts as an audience surrogate, unsure of this odd world led by the often inscrutable Reynolds and Cyril, the latter of whom often has the charm of an asp. But as Alma begins to see the way things work in this cloistered, rarefied world, she begins to find ways to upset it and bend it to her advantage. Cyril is naturally distrusting of this latest distraction, but Reynolds seems to find something in this new, shaky lifestyle of uncertainty.

The performances are fantastic, with Day-Lewis once laying claim to the title of greatest actor of his generation. He complex, unique yet very real, without a single false note. Manville was also singled out for awards consideration, and she’s scary, pitiful, powerful, and voice for order and tradition. Vicky Krieps, a native of Luxembourg, is subtle, sharp, and a match for Day-Lewis as the seemingly simple, unworldly Alma.

The filmmaking is concise and largely unobtrusive, letting the characters do the work, often with silent looks and facial expressions. Director Anderson did not use a Director of Photography on this, instead working with the camera operators themselves. The result is spontaneous but not amateur looking, with a slight gritty haze that makes many scenes almost dream-like. It’s not a look that I would like to see in a lot of films, but it works here among the chilly environments both exterior and interior. The score by Jonny Greenwood, guitarist and songwriter from Radiohead, is surprisingly subdued, mainly light piano pieces, with some flourishes when needed.

I won’t pretend that a lot of viewers will like this, as they might find it slow, pretentious, boring, or pointless. I certainly did not, and found it a deep, and even deeply disturbing, look at a unique type of love fostered by unusual people, told in a compelling, if quiet, way. This is more for the Masterpiece Theatre crowd than the Fast and the Furious crowd. I would rank this among the very best of the year 2017. Highly Recommended.

“There is an air of quiet death in this house and I do not like the way it smells.”

This story might be considered in the realm of one getting in life what they deserve. There came a point in the film where it became completely ludicrous why Reynolds Woodcock (Daniel Day-Lewis) and his paramour Alma (Vicky Krieps) should have remained together. That would have been the first instance in which Alma went the poison mushroom route, and I was kind of intrigued that no one figured that out the first time around. But then, when Alma revealed the specifics of her cat and mouse game to Reynolds himself, I was convinced that these two maladjusted individuals were simply using each other for some twisted version of a relationship that in no way could have been considered love. Like a lot of reviewers here, I can appreciate the rich period detail of the picture, and the gowns designed by the House of Woodcock were elegantly exquisite. But the principal characters were not, for as one dimensional an individual as Reynolds was, Alma proved way beyond a reasonable doubt that she was a ball buster supreme in her own way. Both the ‘toast scraping’ scene and that loooong pour of water meant to get on Reynolds’ nerves were classic in execution. There’s no denying that both Day-Lewis and Ms. Krieps were brilliant in their portrayals, though in the end, the story itself came across as rather pointless.

intriguing power dynamics

In post-war London, Reynolds Woodcock (Daniel Day-Lewis) is a renown dressmaker. His sister Cyril is his constant assistant. At a restaurant, he is enthralled with the fumbling waitress Alma (Vicky Krieps) who is also taken with him. He is particular with what he likes and lives a regimented life. Alma becomes his muse and model but his controlling nature overwhelms her.

Paul Thomas Anderson has a great eye and Daniel delivers a great performance as usual. I’m not familiar with Vicky Krieps. She has some great surprising turns and is skillfully controlled. This is an intriguing portrayal of an imbalanced power dynamic. There is a surprising turn in the middle which I did not expect. After the turn, I expected a better downhill descend into a devastating collapse. Instead, it does something just as unexpected and I’m not as thrill about the second half. One has to respect the director’s vision in this but it does leave me a little wanting.