Close Menu

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest creative news from FooBar about art, design and business.

    What's Hot

    Dom Jones – Seventh Sense (ft. Precision Productions)

    October 24, 2025

    ‘Dancing With the Stars’: Andy Richter Addresses Health Concerns From Fans (Exclusive)

    October 24, 2025

    Is Fahadh Faasil Returning To Telugu Cinema After Pushpa 2? Here’s What We Know

    October 24, 2025
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    8881199.XYZ
    • Home
    • Holly
    • Bolly
    • TV Shows
    • Music
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    8881199.XYZ
    Home»Hollywood»‘Shell’ Review: Elisabeth Moss and Kate Hudson Aren’t Quite Camp in This Clumsy Sci-Fi Satire
    Hollywood

    ‘Shell’ Review: Elisabeth Moss and Kate Hudson Aren’t Quite Camp in This Clumsy Sci-Fi Satire

    David GroveBy David GroveOctober 3, 20256 Mins Read
    Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn WhatsApp Reddit Tumblr Email
    ‘Shell’ Review: Elisabeth Moss and Kate Hudson Aren’t Quite Camp in This Clumsy Sci-Fi Satire
    Share
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email


    Editor’s Note: This review was originally published during the 2024 Toronto Film Festival. Republic Pictures releases “Shell” in select theaters Friday, October 3.

    Some movies suffer because of bad timing. “Shell” wouldn’t be a very good movie under any circumstances, but it fares especially poorly against Coralie Fargeat’s “The Substance,” a better and more outrageous film that deals in very similar subject matter. “Outrageous” is what director Max Minghella is going for here. And when it accepts its destiny as a ‘50s-style rubber-suit sci-fi monster movie, “Shell” does have camp value to it. Even then, it still doesn’t commit to the bit hard enough to make it successful. 

    The Family McMullen
    Jafar Panahi accepts the Palme d’Or Award for 'It Was Just an Accident' onstage during the closing ceremony at the 78th annual Cannes Film Festival.

    There are some funny moments in “Shell” — both intentional and unintentional — and some eye-catching images. The first living creature to appear on screen is a fluffy lap dog smeared with blood, which combines the two; it trots down a dark hallway in an ‘80s-style mansion, its little legs moving as fast as they can. The camera follows the dog into a retro tiled bathroom, where Elizabeth Berkley is sitting in a shell-pink bathtub wearing a matching silk robe cutting grotesque black bumps off of her leg. She’s freaking out. The tub is slippery with blood. She passes out and drops the knife, and the dog starts licking it clean.

    It’s a promising cold open, one that leads into an uneasy blend of attempted pathos and tired entertainment-industry satire as Samantha (Elisabeth Moss) goes out for what she thinks is a meeting with the director of one of the downbeat indie movies Moss sometimes stars in in real life. It turns out to be an open audition, and Samantha loses the role — a divorced single mother of two — to “it” girl Chloe Benson (Kaia Gerber). Chloe is barely old enough to drink, let alone have two kids, but she’s hot and popular on social media so there you go. The experience leads Samantha’s reps (one of whom is played by Ziwe, perfectly cast) to suggest, their voices thick with smarmy faux-concern, that she go rest at the Shell clinic for a while. 

    See also  Zack Snyder Just Joined Instagram And Made It Immediately Clear Who His Superman Is

    CEO Zoe Shannon (Kate Hudson) is the face of Shell, a company whose services blend elements of “Death Becomes Her” and “The Lobster.” In a spa-like atmosphere, people like Samantha can stave off their fear of irrelevance by undergoing an outpatient procedure where their DNA is fused with the DNA of a lobster, or something, resulting in a younger, stronger, taller version of themselves with clear skin and bright eyes. A lot is explained, but none of it sticks. The only things that land are the cutting jokes, which, again, are nothing new — did you know Los Angeles is a shallow and insincere place? — but get some chuckles in the moment. 

    The satire here is clumsy, gesturing at similar points already made in better movies. There’s a rule in comedy that if you have to explain a joke, it’s not a very good joke, and a similar sort of ambiguity is at play here. It’s not always clear if, say, a montage set to “Walkin’ on Sunshine” after her Shell treatment improves Samantha’s life is a tongue-in-cheek parody of cheesy ‘80s movies, or if it’s just plain cheesy itself. This all ties into the camp factor, which could also be used to explain away hacky details like Samantha’s cat as a stand-in for her spinsterhood. Hypothetically. 

    “Shell” also fancies itself body horror, but again it doesn’t commit hard enough to truly excel in that area. Samantha barfs up some black bile, and Zoe’s sycophants eat her skin at a dinner party in a bit that briefly frames her as a Christ figure but doesn’t go anywhere. Then there are the bumps that pop up when the procedure “goes wrong,” which are referred to in the film as “scales” but are more like the kind of lumpy mole that would prompt a visit to the dermatologist. A whole rash of them is pretty gross, but not as gross as it needs to be. Where’s the goop?

    Mysterious pink liquids are injected into willing subjects from unlabeled vials at the Shell clinic, again shades of “The Substance.” Even the surface aesthetics of the films are similar: Both have an eye for ‘80s-inspired fashions and architecture, which manifests here in the form of silver lamé and curved lines. The heightened reality of this film is not as well constructed, however, and with much less intentionality: The self-driving cars that appear in the background throughout the film,for example, serve no particular purpose except to shore up its sci-fi credentials. 

    See also  I Did Not See That Golden Bachelor Elimination Coming, And Now I’m Really Worried About The End Of Mel Owens’ Season

    Everyone in “Shell” lives in this reality except for schlumpy everywoman Moss, who feels like she’s about a half-step off from everyone else. That’s not a failure on the part of the actor, who has proven herself more than capable many times over. It is indicative of the overall clumsiness of the project, whose lack of consistency is present even in little details like that fact that some of the magazines in the film are real (Samantha is profiled in “Vanity Fair”) and others are not (ditto for Zoe in “Persons”). 

    Hudson, meanwhile, does understand the tone Minghella is aiming for here, or is perhaps setting it herself. Her motivations for striking up a friendship with Samantha are inscrutable and predatory, and she plays the chilly villainess with relish as she struts around in fabulous gowns and purrs out pseudo-scientific bullshit. (There’s also the potential for a lesbian subtext to her relationship with Moss, but this is sadly underdeveloped.) Her perfection is supposed to make her hateable, and Moss’ imperfection is similarly meant to frame her as relatable. But pulling off that dynamic in a movie that also has human-sized crustaceans in it is a project for a more skilled filmmaker than this one. 

    Grade: C

    “Shell” premiered at the 2024 Toronto International Film Festival. Republic Pictures releases the film Friday, October 3, 2025.

    Want to stay up to date on IndieWire’s film reviews and critical thoughts? Subscribe here to our newly launched newsletter, In Review by David Ehrlich, in which our Chief Film Critic and Head Reviews Editor rounds up the best reviews, streaming picks, and offers some new musings, all only available to subscribers.



    Source link

    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn WhatsApp Reddit Tumblr Email

    Related Posts

    Why Special Forces: World’s Toughest Test Season 4 Had Me Dying Laughing With The Trust Challenge

    I Got To See Emma Stone’s New Movie Bugonia Early, And I Think You Need To Add This Bonkers Dark Comedy To Your Spooky Season Watchlist

    Jeremy Allen White Got Candid About Why He Asked Bruce Springsteen For ‘A Little Bit Of Space’ While He Filmed Deliver Me From Nowhere

    How Jamie Lynn Spears Reportedly Responded After Kevin Federline Made Her Texts About Britney Spears Public: ‘This Makes Me Want To Cry’

    Don't Miss
    Hollywood December 10, 2024

    A$AP Rocky Is Formally Solid in Spike Lee’s ‘Excessive and Low’ Reimagining with Denzel Washington

    A$AP Rocky is making strikes along with his movie profession: The rapper is starring in…

    You Can Solely See George Romero’s Remaining Work Right here — and No, It’s Not a Movie

    May 9, 2025

    The Younger and the Stressed February 10 Recap: Sharon Expresses Gratitude for Nick’s Assist

    February 11, 2025

    The Abbott Elementary/It's At all times Sunny crossover continues: Watch the brand new trailer

    April 16, 2025

    After Harry Potter Followers Pitch Pierce Brosnan As Dumbledore, The Well-known 007 Actor Admits It’s Turn into A Working Joke Forward Of The TV Collection

    April 26, 2025

    Dhurandhar First Look Reveal Quickly? Director Aditya Dhar Plans Large Shock For Ranveer Singh’s Birthday

    July 5, 2025

    Sabrina Carpenter Brings Out Duran Duran for “Hungry Just like the Wolf” in London: Watch

    July 7, 2025

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest creative news from SmartMag about art & design.

    8881199.XYZ is your source for the latest Hollywood news, movie reviews, TV show updates, celebrity gossip, and music industry insights. Get daily updates on trending movies, popular series, and exclusive stories straight from the entertainment world. Whether you’re a film fan, TV show follower, or music lover, we deliver fresh, engaging content to keep you in the loop on all things Hollywood. Supported by third-party ads, 8881199.XYZ offers free, high-quality entertainment news without intrusive experiences. Explore Hollywood’s best with us for your daily dose of celebrity and industry buzz!

    Our Picks

    ‘A Life Illuminated’ Assessment: A Splendidly Unflashy Documentary About One of many Planet’s Most Fascinating Phenomena

    September 11, 2025

    ‘Buffy the Vampire Slayer’s Opening Credit Get an Unimaginable Claymation Recreation

    January 1, 2025

    ‘That Was My Deal With Chris.’ Elsa Pataky Didn’t Need To Transfer From Hollywood, However She Shares How She And Chris Hemsworth Compromised

    December 16, 2024
    Exclusive

    Sheryl Crow Helps Rising Artists Kyle Ray, Paula Prieto, Vincent Lima at Intimate Showcase: Recap + Photographs

    February 10, 2025

    20 Causes To not Miss Riot Fest's Twentieth Anniversary

    September 4, 2025

    The BTS Pleased Meal Hunt: Podcast

    September 11, 2025
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest
    • Home
    • DMCA Policy
    • Privacy Policy
    • Contact
    © 2025 8881199.XYZ / Designed by MAXBIT.

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.