The Big Picture
- Neil Marshall is doing his best Guy Ritchie impression, but it’s not very good.
- The dialogue is try-hard cringy, sounding oddly repetitive or unnecessary.
-
Duchess
doesn’t muster the zip, vigor, or excitement of even mediocre criminal thrillers.
The downfall of Neil Marshall post-Centurion only worsens with Duchess. Marshall’s aiming for Guy Ritchie meets one of those escapist romantic novels with Fabio cover art, but lands on an A.I. spitout of movies like Layer Cake or Snatch. Grok Ritchie, if you will. A screenplay by Marshall and co-written by lead actress slash executive producer Charlotte Kirk keeps missing the mark, stumbling through gangland stereotypes and shootouts against henchmen who couldn’t hit the Stay Puft Marshmallow Man from twenty feet away. In the pantheon of Lock, Stock and Two Smoking Barrels imitations, Duchess ranks toward the bottom — an unenthusiastic union of genres with an empty creative clip.
What Is ‘Duchess’ About?
Kirk stars as Scarlett Monaghan, “a tough, working-class, petty criminal” who’s barely shown as any of those things before meeting the love of her life, James Bond Lite, Robert McNaughton (Philip Winchester). It’s revealed that “Rob” is a wealthy smuggler with expensive tastes, welcoming Scarlett into his Canary Islands criminal outfit alongside longtime accomplices Danny Oswald (Sean Pertwee) and Billy Baraka (Hoji Fortuna). As is common in Rob’s field, a double cross brings mercenaries and rats to his doorstep. Through a series of predicaments, Scarlett finds herself relying on Rob’s training and must become the badass version of herself: Duchess.
Unfortunately, Marshall doesn’t show you anything that might contextualize Scarlett’s evolution from a fighter who can land only one punch in a boxing ring to an expert assassin. Duchess is all-talk boredom; characters must speak its plot advancements aloud — otherwise, we’d be completely stumped. The film’s requisite training montage barely shows Scarlett improving with Rob, more often rolling around under bedsheets. Duchess starts with the vague introduction of Scarlett as an action heroine, but then confusingly plops her next to Rob as an eye-candy damsel. Her place as Rob’s hot-to-trot lover is more critical than developmental motivations, which the script exploits for multiple cheesy pre-and-post-sex sequences that detract from storytelling. It’s a tonal jumble of romantic drivel with plenty of abs and sideboob, barely fit for airport bookstore shelves.
Marshall and Kirk’s screenplay is a mess of character introductions and affronting dialogue delivered by Kirk’s “Oi, gov’nuh” accent. Over and over the film freeze-frames on a new face and flashes a graphic designed namecard like in all the movies Marshall tries to emulate, which starts feeling like a prank after the midway point. Brand new blokes appear at the buzzer because Duchess has no quality to showcase, just quantity. Half the duration feels like Kirk’s narration reads names from a rejected henchman phonebook. It’s such a bafflingly overstuffed movie regarding pawns on the board, and yet there’s so little significance to violence, setups, and vengeance. The writing feels like a first draft at points, as Baraka asks Rob — deadass out loud — “How are we going to get ourselves out of this mess?” Cut to Rob holding a hand grenade, taking the time to answer, “With this!” Not to mention all the inorganic jabbering from Kirk’s faux femme fatale.
‘Duchess’ Never Has Exciting Action
Maybe if Duchess shot-’em-up with exhilaration, leaning on blow-you-away action spectacles, there’d be some forgiveness — but the gunplay is just as tragic. Every showdown between Rob’s crew and casually dressed adversaries peppers everywhere but targets with ammo. Sean Pertwee’s Danny rolls around on parking lot concrete in the open like he’s invincible, or Rob casually jogs to his getaway vehicle, dives into the wide-open pickup bed, and sits there nonchalantly as a hail of bullets dings everything but flesh. Marshall attempts to ratchet up the gore factor with a roadkill death or power drill to the skull, but even those moments are lifeless. Most actors, including the heavily featured Kirk, can’t sport combat chops beyond basic choreography — and even then, the cinematography does its best to hide slowly thrown punches or pulled maneuvers.
To be fair, this is the most I’ve tolerated Kirk in any of her collaborations with Marshall. When she’s not breaking sweats in skin-tight workout gear or pouncing on a shirtless Winchester, a glimmer of pulpy character appeal sells her feisty rogue. Kirk physically postures as her part, but then kills the mood with another Z-grade, tryhard line or dim overexplanation. The script is atrocious on multiple levels, wasting the talents of beloved veterans like Mr. Pertwee, Colm Meaney, and Stephanie Beacham in this wannabe late-night treat that steals its identity from better projects.
Inauthenticity poisons Duchess for its excruciating (almost) two hours. Nothing depicted convinces us that Scarlett is the powerhouse vixen supporting characters swear she is. The camera often gazes Kirk up and down in a way that Marshall might deem empowering, but weirdly objectifies her as nothing more than exquisite beauty. Marshall struggles to find the line between romantic getaways, erotic thrillers, and dumb-fun action flicks. And by struggles, I mean he bulldozes through the film and leaves a tonal rubble heap in his wake. Perhaps Paul Lawler‘s score ripped from jazzy Ritchie soundtracks makes scenes a bit more palatable, but even that’d be like complimenting a Spotify playlist titled “Kewl Shootout Music.”
Duchess is a soulless attempt at recreating energetic British smuggler thrillers headed by Jason Statham or Daniel Craig. It’s monotonous, underdeveloped, overlong, and bastardizes the genre it’s trying to infiltrate. Marshall’s attempt to thrust Kirk into the spotlight feels like playing Atomic Blonde dress-up without any of the technique or bruises. Every line uttered sounds torn from another studio’s cutting room floor, or even worse, forgotten as placeholders that accidentally made the final cut. There’s nothing wrong with a passion project, but Duchess feels like it gets lost in a singular creative’s personal fantasy.
REVIEW
Duchess (2024)
Duchess is a flat and forgettable riff on Guy Ritchie classics that doesn’t have an ounce of the wit, charm, or glorious mayhem.
- More Sean Pertwee is always a good thing.
- It?s better than The Lair and The Reckoning.
- For a few brief glimpses, Duchess looks like proper criminal fun.
- Charlotte Kirk struggles to be a convincing lead.
- The script is appalling, especially tragic dialogue.
- It brings less than nothing to the conversation, and wouldn?t even be allowed in the room.
Duchess is now playing in theaters in the U.S. and is available to stream on VOD. Click below for showtimes near you.
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