Saltburn (film)

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Saltburn
Theatrical release poster
Directed byEmerald Fennell
Written byEmerald Fennell
Produced by
Starring
CinematographyLinus Sandgren
Edited byVictoria Boydell
Music byAnthony Willis
Production
companies
Distributed by
Release dates
  • 31 August 2023 (2023-08-31) (Telluride)
  • 17 November 2023 (2023-11-17) (United Kingdom and United States)
Running time
131 minutes[1]
Countries
  • United Kingdom
  • United States
LanguageEnglish
Box office$20.3 million[2][3]

Saltburn is a 2023 black comedy[4][5] psychological thriller film written, directed, and produced by Emerald Fennell,[6] starring Barry Keoghan, Jacob Elordi, Rosamund Pike, Richard E. Grant, Alison Oliver, and Archie Madekwe. Set in Oxford and Northamptonshire, England, the film follows an Oxford university student who becomes enticed with a popular and aristocratic student within his university, who later invites him to spend the summer at his eccentric family's estate.[7]

Saltburn premiered at the 50th Telluride Film Festival on 31 August 2023, then was released theatrically in the United Kingdom on 17 November 2023, and in the United States via a limited theatrical release on the same day. The film had its wide release on 22 November before its streaming release by Amazon Prime Video on 22 December. It received generally positive reviews from critics and several accolades, including two nominations at the 81st Golden Globe Awards for Best Actor (Keoghan) and Best Supporting Actress (Pike).

Plot

In autumn 2006,[8] scholarship student Oliver Quick attends the University of Oxford, struggling to fit in due to his inexperience with upper-class manners. He befriends Felix Catton, an affluent and popular student who is empathetic to Oliver's stories of his parents' substance abuse and mental health issues. When Oliver becomes distraught over his father's sudden death, Felix comforts him and invites him to spend the summer at his family's estate, Saltburn.

At Saltburn, Oliver meets Felix's eccentric parents Sir James and Lady Elspeth, his sister Venetia, Elspeth's friend Pamela, and their American cousin Farleigh whom Oliver had met earlier at Oxford and has a tense relationship with. He quickly wins over Felix's family and his obsession with Felix grows. One night, he watches Felix masturbating in a bathtub and lustfully drinks the semen-laced bathwater. He later seduces Venetia and performs oral sex on her while she is menstruating. Farleigh witnesses this and informs Felix. When Felix confronts Oliver, he claims nothing had happened. At night, Oliver initiates a sexual encounter with Farleigh, threatening him in the process to behave. Farleigh gives no enthusiastic consent. The next morning, Farleigh is evicted by James after receiving a report from Sotheby's that he intends to sell valuables from James' collection for cash.

As the summer ends, Elspeth and James plan a party for Oliver's birthday. Felix surprises Oliver with a trip to see his estranged mother. Oliver panics, and upon arriving at the family's house in Prescot, Felix realises he had lied about his upbringing. Oliver's father is still alive, neither of his parents are substance abuse victims, and they live in a respectable middle-class suburb. Horrified and hurt by Oliver's deception, Felix orders him to leave after the party. During the celebrations, Oliver seeks to make amends with Felix by expressing his adoration for him. Felix rejects him and suggests he seek help.

The next morning, Felix is found dead in Saltburn's hedge maze. Oliver implies Farleigh's drug use had a connection to Felix's death, and James forbids Farleigh from coming back, cutting off all financial support to him. After Felix's funeral, Elspeth insists that Oliver should extend his stay at Saltburn. Oliver mourns Felix and visits his grave. He undresses and sexually grinds against the soil on his grave. That night, Venetia accuses Oliver of disintegrating her family. He attempts to seduce her, but she rebuffs him, disturbed by his growing impersonation of Felix. The next day, Venetia is found dead, having slit her wrists in the bathtub. Despondent of Oliver's continuing presence at Saltburn and Elspeth's closeness to him, James bribes him to leave. Oliver accepts and leaves.

In 2022, Oliver reads about James's death in a newspaper. He has a chance encounter with Elspeth at a café and she is delighted to see him, insisting he return with her to Saltburn. After spending several months with Oliver, Elspeth becomes fatally ill. On her deathbed, Oliver reveals that he had been responsible for the tragic events at Saltburn. He had orchestrated his meeting Felix at Oxford by puncturing his bicycle tyre, and had murdered him by poisoning his drink after his rejection in the maze. He had kept the razor blades near Venetia's bath after implying that she should commit suicide, and fabricated the email which resulted in Farleigh's expulsion from the estate. He planned his encounter with Elspeth at the café, after which she had subsequently bequeathed all of her financial assets to Oliver, including Saltburn. Oliver kills Elspeth by forcibly removing her ventilator. Having now assumed ownership of Saltburn and the Catton fortune, he dances naked around the mansion.

Cast

Production

Development and casting

Writer and director Emerald Fennell

Saltburn is the second film directed by Emerald Fennell, after Promising Young Woman (2020).[9] By January 2022, Tom Ackerley and Margot Robbie's LuckyChap Entertainment was in talks to produce, after collaborating with Fennell on her previous film.[10] In May 2022, Ackerley, Robbie, and Josey McNamara were confirmed as producers, while Rosamund Pike, Jacob Elordi, and Barry Keoghan joined the cast.[11][12] Fennell said that Australian actor Elordi "...did the most exceptional audition... He did such a genius, genius bit of observational comedy. He really really understood that for all of [Felix's] beauty and charisma, he's just sort of a spoiled little boy. He came in and just absolutely blew us all away".[13]

Carey Mulligan, star of Promising Young Woman, was revealed to be part of the cast in December 2022.[14]

In writing the film, Fennell wanted to sympathise with unlikeable people, saying "the sorts of people that we can't stand, the sorts of people who are abhorrent—if we can love them, if we can fall in love with these people, if we can understand why this is so alluring, in spite of its palpable cruelty and unfairness and sort of strangeness, if we all want to be there too, I think that's just such an interesting dynamic." She had long wanted to make her own version of films and books set in a country house, and set the film in 2006 to "really [knock] the fucking glamour off things" by setting it in the recent past.[15]

Filming

Drayton House in Northamptonshire was used as a primary filming location

Filming began on 16 July 2022, with Linus Sandgren serving as cinematographer.[16] The film is shown in a 1.33:1 aspect ratio, with Fennell saying it gives the impression of "peeping in."[15]

Fennell was determined not to film in an estate familiar to viewers, and wanted to set the movie in one location, so aligning the filming with the film's plot, saying, "It was important to me that we were all in there together, that the making of the film in some way had that feeling of a summer where everyone loses their mind together...I didn't want to be constantly picking up and moving." and avoiding the need for post-production adjustments due to multiple locations.[15] Fennell was successful, with filming occurring at the University of Oxford at Magdalen College, St Hugh's College and Brasenose College and in Drayton House, Northamptonshire,[17][18] which had never been used for filming before and may never be used again, with a part of the contract being that no one was allowed to reveal the location of the house or the identity of its owners. Despite the house's opulence, the actors ultimately became familiar with Drayton's interiors over the course of filming and comfortable working in it, in order to convey the idea that this grand location was for their characters completely normal and simply their home.[15]

Magdalen College, Oxford
St Hugh's College, Oxford

Costumes were designed with great attention to detail, with 2000s fashion displayed in the form of ostentatious jackets, rugby shirts, and loud jewellery.[13]

Music

The film is scored by Anthony Willis, who previously scored Fennell's Promising Young Woman. The soundtrack was released by Milan Records on 17 November 2023.

One of the songs featured in the film, Sophie Ellis-Bextor's "Murder on the Dancefloor" was featured in the last scene of film.[19][20] As a result, the song re-entered the top 40 UK singles chart twenty-two years after its release, and garnered its most-ever global streams on Spotify, receiving more than 1.4 million streams on New Year's Eve.[21][22]

Themes and influences

The film focuses on excess and obsession. Fennell stated "I drew from my own experience of being a human person, who has felt that thing we all feel at that time in our life which is that absolute insane grip of obsessive love...But obviously I didn't quite go to the lengths that some of the people [in the film] do".[13]

Discussing the film's influences, Fennell has cited A Clockwork Orange (1971),[23] Cruel Intentions (1999),[23] Daphne du Maurier's Rebecca (1938),[23] and the novel The Go-Between (1953) by L.P. Hartley and its 1971 film adaptation.[23] She commented, "I think that I was sort of looking more at that British Country House tradition of The Go-Between and that sort of very specific British... sort of Joseph Losey world, where class and power and sex all kind of collide in one specific place."[24]

Patricia Highsmith's novel The Talented Mr. Ripley (1955) and its film adaptation (1999) have been oft-cited as an influence by critics due to the common themes of social class and the similarities between Oliver and Tom Ripley, the eponymous protagonist,[25][26][27] though Fennell herself has downplayed these comparisons.[24] Richard Brody of The New Yorker also found similarities to the novel Brideshead Revisited by Evelyn Waugh.[28]

Release

Saltburn had its world premiere at the 50th Telluride Film Festival on 31 August 2023.[29][30] It premiered in the United Kingdom (UK) as the opening film of the 67th BFI London Film Festival on 4 October 2023.[31] It also premiered in Australia at SXSW Sydney on 20 October 2023.[32]

In the United States, Saltburn was given a limited release on 17 November 2023, followed by a wide release by Amazon MGM Studios on 22 November 2023.[25] It was originally scheduled to be released on 24 November 2023, but was moved up a week to take advantage of the initial positive response it received at its Telluride premiere.[33]

Warner Bros. Pictures handled the UK and Ireland release of Saltburn, with a 16 November release in Australia and a 17 November release in the UK.[34][35] The film became available to stream on Amazon Prime Video on 22 December 2023.[36][37]

Reception

Box office

As of 2 January 2024, Saltburn had grossed $11.3 million in the United States and Canada, and $9 million in other territories, for a worldwide total of $20.3 million.[2][3]

In its limited opening weekend, the film made $322,651 from seven theaters.[38] Expanding to 1,566 theaters the following Wednesday, the wide expansion of the film was released alongside Napoleon and Wish, and made $684,000 on its first day of wide release then $301,000 on Thanksgiving Day. Its debut made $1.8 million on the weekend (and a total of $2.9 million over the five-day frame), finishing in ninth.[39] The film dropped just 16% the following weekend, grossing $1.6 million.[40]

Critical response

On the review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes, 71% of 267 critics' reviews are positive, with an average rating of 6.8/10. The website's consensus reads: "Emerald Fennell's candy-coated and incisive Saltburn is a debauched jolt to the senses that will be invigorating for most."[41] Metacritic, which uses a weighted average, assigned the film a score of 61 out of 100, based on 53 critics, indicating "generally favorable" reviews.[42] Audiences surveyed by CinemaScore gave the film an average grade of "B−" on an A+ to F scale, and those polled by PostTrak gave it a 75% overall positive score, and 42% said they would definitely recommend the film.[39]

The Guardian reviewed the film after its August premiere and again after its release. Peter Bradshaw gave it three stars out of five. He noted that it "boasts dazzling turns from Rosamund Pike and Carey Mulligan" but that "the heavily drawn-out ending feels uncertain".[43] Wendy Ide wrote that it "stars a miscast Barry Keoghan (he's way too old for the role)" but that "Rosamund Pike, as Felix's mother Elspeth, is gloriously rude; Archie Madekwe, as poor relation Farleigh, is a malicious delight". She awarded two out of five stars.[44]

Nicholas Barber, reviewing the film for the BBC, enjoyed the "outrageous, laugh-out-loud punchlines" but felt that "Fennell is prone to fumble" plot twists. He concludes that "if you see it as a lurid pulp fantasy rather than a penetrating satire, then Saltburn is deliriously enjoyable" and awards four out of five stars.[4] Empire gave the film three out of five stars. In her review, Sophie Butcher reports that "Saltburn looks divine. Fennell's eye is extraordinary, and alongside cinematographer Linus Sandgren, she captures the grand beauty of her architectural locations impeccably" but was disappointed that "Scenes often build to reach the cusp of something truly electric, but are let down by clunky dialogue."[45]

Writing in Sight and Sound, Sophie Monks Kaufman found that "the story's superficial treatment of its characters ... becomes increasingly ruinous" and that "the most menacing thing anyone can muster here is a passive-aggressive karaoke choice". She was also underwhelmed by the film's "ostentatious visual language".[5]

Accolades

Award Date of ceremony Category Recipient(s) Result Ref.
Mill Valley Film Festival October 16, 2023 Filmmaker of the Year Emerald Fennell Won [46]
Savannah Film Festival November 2, 2023 Audience Award Saltburn Won [47]
Hollywood Music in Media Awards November 15, 2023 Original Score – Feature Film Anthony Willis Nominated [48]
Denver Film Critics Society January 12, 2024 Best Director Emerald Fennell Pending [49]
Best Actor Barry Keoghan Pending
Best Supporting Actress Rosamund Pike Pending
Best Original Screenplay Emerald Fennell Pending
Dublin Film Critics' Circle December 18, 2023 Best Actor Barry Keoghan Nominated [50]
Astra Film and Creative Awards January 6, 2024 Pending [51]
Best Director Emerald Fennell Pending
Best Original Screenplay Pending
February 26, 2024 Best Cinematography Linus Sandgren Pending
Best Production Design Suzie Davies, Charlotte Dirickx Pending
Best Score Anthony Willis Pending
Golden Globe Awards January 7, 2024 Best Actor – Motion Picture Drama Barry Keoghan Pending [52]
Best Supporting Actress – Motion Picture Rosamund Pike Pending
Critics' Choice Movie Awards January 14, 2024 Best Picture Saltburn Pending [53]
Best Cinematography Linus Sandgren Pending
Best Production Design Suzie Davies and Charlotte Dirickx Pending
London Film Critics' Circle February 4, 2024 Supporting Actress of the Year Rosamund Pike Pending [54]
British/Irish Performer of the Year Carey Mulligan (also for Maestro) Pending
Technical Achievement Award Kharmel Cochrane Pending
AACTA International Awards February 10, 2024 Best Supporting Actor Jacob Elordi Pending [55]
Best Supporting Actress Rosamund Pike Pending
Society of Composers & Lyricists February 13, 2024 Outstanding Original Score for a Studio Film Anthony Willis Pending [56]
Satellite Awards February 17, 2024 Best Actor – Motion Picture Comedy or Musical Barry Keoghan Pending [57]
Best Supporting Actress – Motion Picture Rosamund Pike Pending
Best Cinematography Linus Sandgren Pending
Make-Up Artists and Hair Stylists Guild February 18, 2024 Best Contemporary Make-Up Siân Miller, Laura Allen Pending [58]
Best Contemporary Hair Styling Pending
Alliance of Women Film Journalists TBA Best Actress in a Supporting Role Rosamund Pike Nominated [59]
Best Woman Director Emerald Fennell Nominated
Best Woman Screenwriter Nominated

References

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External links