“Saltburn”: This guy turns the tables and stabs you

“Saltburn”: This guy turns the tables and stabs you


Image: Amazon Studios

From “Bridget Jones” until “The King’s Speech” There is no British cinema of significance that does not address this issue: class struggle.

With “Saltburn” is a film available on Amazon Prime from December 22nd that deals with the gap between workers and aristocracy in a way that even those who know this finesse will be amazed.

The film comes from Londoner Emerald Fennell, known for her radical feminist masterpiece “Promising Young Woman” (2020) won the screenplay Oscar.

Anyone who knows it knows one thing: In terms of narrative, the 38-year-old prefers to pursue liberating destruction rather than the conflict-filled but ultimately harmonious marriage of opposites. In “Saltburn” Fennell (director and screenplay) now cheerfully throws young men into such a dynamic: Oliver – the Irishman Barry Keoghan (31) – and Felix, the Australian Jacob Elrodi (26, “Priscilla”) is quite impressive.

It’s the year 2006. Thanks to scholarships, the brilliant Oliver is able to study at the elite Oxford University. Felix’s friends, the aristocratic It boy of the year, see him as a pariah. Until the unbelievable happens: Felix and Oliver become best friends and the privileged one invites him “poor” Upstart even goes to his family’s country estate: Saltburn during the summer holidays.

If you initially believe that you are observing a perhaps difficult young love, you are actually experiencing the start of an increasingly dangerous dance on the social stage – for respect and power. The leadership changes are the delicacies of the dramaturgy, Keo-ghan’s skill is that of the acting, fiercely fired by Rosamunde Pike as Felix’s deliciously rapturous mother. Both are for one “Golden Globes” nominated.

While it seems for a while that Oliver is falling under the wheels of an upper-class clan, a realization slowly sinks in: This guy isn’t just turning the tables, he’s also going to stab him. All Keoghan needs to do is change the tension of a facial muscle. Instead of looking into the dachshund eyes of a little dog, you look evil straight in the face. A fantastically wild film that grips you.

“Saltburn”: USA/GB, 127 mins, on Amazon from December 22nd
OÖN rating: five out of six stars

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