Cast: Dakota Johnson (Anastasia Steele) Jamie Dornan (Christian Grey) Kim Basinger (Elena Lincoln/Mrs. Robinson) Bella Heathcote (Leila Williams) Max Martini (Jason Taylor) Marcia Gay Harden (Grace Trevelyan Grey) Rita Ora (Mia Grey) Luke Grimes (Elliot Grey) Bruce Altman (Jerry Roach) Eric Johnson (Jack Hyde) Fay Masterson (Gail Jones) Dylan Neal (Bob Adams) Eloise Mumford (Katherine 'Kate' Kavanagh) Victor Rasuk (JosĂŠ Rodriguez) Andrew Airlie (Carrick Grey) Cast completo
Robinne Lee (Ros Bailey) Brant Daugherty (Luke Sawyer) Michelle Harrison (Partecipante all'asta)
Musica: Danny Elfman
Costumi: Shay Cunliffe
Scenografia: Nelson Coates
Fotografia: John Schwartzman
Montaggio: Richard Francis-Bruce
Effetti Speciali: Alex Burdett (supervisore)
Makeup: Evelyne Noraz e Rosalina Da Silva (capo dipartimento makeup); Danna Rutherford (capo dipartimento acconciature)
Casting: Laray Mayfield e Julie Schubert
Scheda film aggiornata al:
13 Agosto 2017
Sinossi:
In breve:
Nel sequel di Cinquanta sfumature di grigio (2015) i protagonisti sono sempre Jamie Dornan e Dakota Johnson, al centro di una storia d'amore questa volta ancora piÚ "dark". Nel cast anche Hugh Dancy nei panni dello psichiatra di Christian Grey, costretto a rivolgersi a lui dopo l'incontro con la donna (Kim Basinger) che in passato lo iniziò alle tecniche sadomaso.
In altre parole:
Quando un addolorato Christian Grey cerca di persuadere una cauta Ana Steele a tornare nella sua vita, lei esige un nuovo accordo in cambio di unâaltra possibilitĂ . I due iniziano cosĂŹ a ricostruire un rapporto basato sulla fiducia e a trovare un equilibrio, ma alcune figure misteriose provenienti dal passato di Christian accerchiano la coppia, decise ad annientare le loro speranze di un futuro insieme.
SHORT SYNOPSIS:
While Christian wrestles with his inner demons, Anastasia must confront the anger and envy of the women who came before her.
Secondo commento critico (a cura di GUY LODGE, www.variety.com)
James Foley's follow-up to 2015's erotic schlockbuster lacks its predecessor's surprising, feminine sass, but succeeds on its most superficial terms.
âI was reading Austen and BrontĂŤ and no one ever measured up to that,â says Anastasia Steele of her romantic history near the beginning of âFifty Shades Darker.â Had she only been reading E.L. James, she might have been less disappointed in life â though in her first film outing, 2015âs slinky schlockbuster âFifty Shades of Grey,â director Sam Taylor-Johnson and screenwriter Kelly Marcel also aspired to a higher standard. Smartly gutting Jamesâs viscous purple prose for something more curt and witty, it was one of the great pleasant surprises in recent studio moviemaking. So itâs perhaps unfair to knock James Foleyâs serviceable, lip-glossed sequel merely for delivering what might have reasonably been expected in the first place: an expensively scented two-hour soapdown, interspersed with some light erotic frisking,
all administered very much with the original authorâs sticky-fingered touch. Sure to make Grey at the Valentineâs Day box office, âDarkerâ does almost nothing to fulfil the promise of its title, but itâs still diverting, sleekly styled and just sexy enough to frighten a few frigid horses.
With a brusque farewell as the elevator doors clamped shut, ending a long, tortured romantic negotiation on the chilliest of notes, âFifty Shades of Greyâ pulled off what might have been one of the great modern Hollywood endings â if not for the assured knowledge that a sequel was coming down the pike to undo its decisive snap. The original novel, for all its stylistic ineptitude, likewise works better as a self-contained narrative than as a franchise-starter: Once shy Anastasia (Dakota Johnson), tested to her limits by the brand of possessive S&M wielded by Christian Grey (Jamie Dornan), resolves that sheâs better off as
her own woman, continuing their romance entails doubling back on a lot of good character work.
But thereâs money to be made and fans to be serviced, and so âFifty Shades Darkerâ is here to â in the words of Coldplayâs âThe Scientist,â covered in Corinne Bailey Raeâs dulcet greige tones over the opening credits â take us back to the start. Itâs been three weeks since Anastasia and Christian called off their arrangement (ârelationshipâ is too lofty a term for its first iteration), and apparently much soul-searching, troubled sleeping and pensive pacing across marble floors has taken place in the interim. âI want you back,â he tells her bluntly, somewhat surprisingly not cuing an angsty The Weeknd cover of the Jackson 5 hit on the filmâs trigger-happy pop soundtrack. Does she feel likewise, though? Despite the distraction of a dreamy new job as assistant to dreamier publishing house editor Jack
Hyde (Eric Johnson), she does â with the wan caveat that their reconciliation proceed with âno rules, no punishment and no more secrets.â
Needless to say, there wouldnât be much of a movie left if he honored these stipulations and refitted the Red Room of Pain with some comfy ivory banquettes and a selection of Pottery Barnâs finest throw cushions. For all her earlier skittishness, it takes but one fancy dinner and some selfless cunnilingus for Anastasia to admit that sheâs ready to return to the Grey side. Itâs not long before heâs authoritatively popping vaginal beads inside her person, whisking her off to masked balls (not his own) and forbidding her to go on work trips with her smarmily dashing new boss because âhe wants whatâs mine.â
If the original film narrowly skated around their relationshipâs misogynistic undertow by giving Anastasia a strong, searching, sometimes skeptical point of view, itâs far
more difficult here to determine what she wants, or what her prior experience with Christian has made of her. Quite literally requesting to be spanked one minute, then aghast at his aggressively dominant tendencies the next, she essentially retraces her painful arc of discovery from the first film â only with selective flashes of amnesia regarding his cruellest impulses. Thereâs certainly something to be said here about the chronic compulsive behavior of masochists as well as sadists, but amid its luxurious montages of burrata-smooth flesh, industrial-strength lingerie and bruiseless manhandling, âFifty Shades Darkerâ isnât in the mood to say it.
Itâs not just on screen, of course, that the new film has lost its predecessorâs feminine perspective, with Taylor-Johnson and Marcel both stepping down to make way for, respectively, accomplished B-movie veteran Foley and screenwriter Niall Leonard â otherwise known as Mr. E.L. James. Leonard permits his wifeâs authorial voice to
trickle more floridly through to the finished film than Marcel did: All the novelsâ talk of inner goddesses is mercifully still kept at bay, but much of the dialogue here is pure Harlequinese, with Anastasia and Christianâs exchanges particularly missing the first filmâs pert, playful zing. If Christianâs sister Mia (pop star Rita Ora, given a couple of scenes this time and mouthily seizing them) rightly observes that heâs âthe man with everything but a sense of humor,â it would appear that Anastasia has turned under his influence.
In Leonardâs defense, heâs faithfully working with (even) lesser material than Marcel was. Thereâs little shape to âDarkerâsâ baggy retread of the leadsâ push-pull seduction, despite a wealth of narrative corners: the aforementioned tension between Anastasiaâs boyfriend and boss, some ominous stalking from one of Christianâs former submissives (Bella Heathcote), friction with the abusive sexual instructor of his youth (a fine, tart and
sorely underworked Kim Basinger), not to mention a tossed-in helicopter crash that leaves even fewer visible marks than the loversâ Red Room antics. For all this activity, Anastasia and Christian simply arenât given that much to do â a climactic romantic act has be consecutively replayed in three different contexts, just so the characters can stretch their legs a bit.
And yet, for all its structural and psychological deficiencies, itâs hard not to enjoy âFifty Shades Darkerâ on its own lusciously limited terms. Rebounding from the joylessly lurid genre fug of 2007âs misbegotten âPerfect Stranger,â Foleyâs return to the big screen shows some of his velvety class as a trash stylist. He doesnât approach the plentiful sex scenes, in particular, with quite as much crisp ingenuity as Taylor-Johnson did, but with cinematographer John Schwartzman slathering on the satin finish by the bucketful, they more than suffice as coffee-table titillation. If anything,
the film is most seductive outside of either the bedroom or the Red Room, when it succumbs to the sheer lifestyle porn of overly art-directed Venetian parties and platinum Monique Lhuillier gowns. A sweepingly shot yachting sequence may be a shameless rehash of the first filmâs vertiginous flying hijinks, but itâs irresistible all the same, scored as it is to the creamy pop perfection of Taylor Swift and Zayn Malikâs âI Donât Want to Live Foreverâ â first cut among equals on a savvy background playlist that also includes Halsey, Ora and the ubiquitous Sia.
As for the stars, they grin and bear it as best they can, which is to stay they valiantly donât grin much at all. So wonderful and resourceful in the first film, Johnson isnât given even the raw material to make an equivalent impression this time round, but maintains a beguilingly responsive, curious screen presence even
through Anastasiaâs inscrutable shifts in consciousness. Dornan, sporting an extra coat of stubble and, impossibly, even further evidence of gym hours than before, has even less to work with, but accepts his aesthetic obligations with good grace.
We care not a lick for these beautiful people, nor for their future together, as teased in a glistening mini-trailer for next yearâs âFifty Shades Freedâ halfway through the closing credits. Yet to find yourself rooting for their union purely because theyâre both so damn hot is to realize that âFifty Shades Darkerâ has worked its shallow magic on you. âI was being romantic and then you go and distract me with your kinky fâkery,â Anastasia chides Christian at one point â to which the audience can only conclude that, with all due respect to her dreams of Austen and BrontĂŤ, heâs got the better idea.