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Movie Review

Jessica Chastain ups the ante in high-stakes Molly's Game

Alex Bentley
Dec 22, 2017 | 11:45 am
Jessica Chastain ups the ante in high-stakes Molly's Game
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In a year filled with powerful men having to reckon with their sins against women, it has been a coincidental joy to watch a slew of movies featuring strong, confident lead female characters. This has led to one of the toughest fields in recent memory for the Best Actress category in upcoming awards shows, a trend we can only hope will continue in coming years.

Joining that group is Jessica Chastain as Molly Bloom in Molly’s Game. Bloom is a real person who has led a fascinating life, first as an Olympic-quality downhill skier, and later as the leader of high-stakes underground poker games in both Los Angeles and New York City.

Her time as a skier, with an iron-handed push from her father (Kevin Costner), established her competitive spirit and force of will, two things she could use to successfully run poker games. Those games gained her entrée into the world of celebrities, sports stars, politicians, and the like, but they also made her a target of the FBI, especially when she didn’t vet her players as closely as she should have.

Written and directed by Aaron Sorkin, the film essentially tells two stories: How she established herself so well as a runner of poker games, and how she defended herself against federal charges associated with those games, with help from her lawyer, Charlie Jaffey (Idris Elba).

The first story is compelling and full of intrigue; Molly uses a combination of intelligence, charm, and beauty to assert her control over the games and players. Her legal struggles, which are sprinkled in throughout the film, are not quite as interesting. Sorkin obviously wants the rapport between Molly and Charlie to mean something profound, but he never quite gets there.

Anyone looking for dirt on well-known people from the film will be disappointed. While published reports have named celebrities like Leonardo DiCaprio, Ben Affleck, and Tobey Maguire as players in Molly’s games, the closest the film comes is having Michael Cera play a celebrity named Player X. He’s likely a stand-in for Maguire, but the film never explicitly says so.

Sorkin seems to want to have it both ways when it comes to the type of person Molly is. She’s a take-charge hero type, someone who won’t let anyone or anything hold her back. But her chosen line of work is, if not technically illegal, always right on that edge, making her a type of antihero. This duality is not unusual, but in playing both sides, Sorkin lessens her impact.

However, Chastain overcomes any character flaws with her typically strong performance. Just as in films like Zero Dark Thirty and Miss Sloane, she takes command of the film, dominating every scene she’s in. Elba and Costner are good, but the movie belongs to Chastain through-and-through.

Molly’s Game deserves credit for telling a well-crafted if slightly underwhelming female-fronted story. The world is better for giving a talented actor like Chastain every opportunity she can to shine.

Jessica Chastain and Idris Elba in Molly's Game.

Jessica Chastain and Idris Elba in Molly's Game
Photo by Michael Gibson- Motion Picture Artwork
Jessica Chastain and Idris Elba in Molly's Game.
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Movie Review

Amanda Seyfried and Sydney Sweeney go off in trashy film The Housemaid

Alex Bentley
Dec 19, 2025 | 12:24 pm
Amanda Seyfried and Sydney Sweeney in The Housemaid
Photo courtesy of Lionsgate
Amanda Seyfried and Sydney Sweeney in The Housemaid.

Both Amanda Seyfried (the upcoming The Testament of Ann Lee) and Sydney Sweeney (Christy) are starring in movies with Oscar ambitions this year. By sheer coincidence, the two actors are also co-starring in The Housemaid, a thriller coming out within weeks of their more ambitious works, one that is likely to be seen by many more people than those prestige plays.

Sweeney is given top billing as Millie, a down-on-her-luck ex-convict looking to land any type of job so as not to break her parole. She finds a too-good-to-be-true lifeboat with Nina (Seyfried), who hires her to be a housemaid for her large house on Long Island, where she lives with her husband, Andrew (Brandon Sklenar), and daughter, Cecilia (Indiana Elle).

After a warm interview, Nina almost immediately becomes highly erratic, whipping back-and-forth between happy-go-lucky and rageful. It seems clear that Nina is suffering from mental health issues, as she’ll often accuse Millie of misplacing or stealing items that she didn’t take. Andrew, apparently used to Nina’s tirades, tries to protect Millie from the worst, something that grows increasingly difficult as Nina ups the ante.

Directed by Paul Feig (A Simple Favor) and adapted by Rebecca Sonnenshine from the bestselling book by Freida McFadden, the film is likely the trashiest mainstream movie to come out in 2025. The first half of the movie relies not on story but on moments as Nina embodies the word “hysterical” to an unbelievable extent. The resigned acceptance of the abuse by Millie, as well as the saintly patience of Andrew, make almost every scene laughable, as nobody seems to be acting anywhere close to how a person would normally react to such extreme situations.

The scenes and the performance of Seyfried are so over-the-top, in fact, that it’s clear that the filmmakers are in on the joke. It’s next to impossible not to have a little bit of fun while watching the actors react to outrageous incidents as if nothing is out of the ordinary. The worse Nina acts, the more Millie and Andrew retreat into their chosen roles, and the funnier the film becomes.

Fans of the book will know that the story changes course, eventually turning into a more stereotypical thriller that also has some relatively gnarly visuals to offer. But the trashiness continues, with Sweeney’s, um, assets repeatedly on display in both clothed and unclothed ways. The sex appeal of the R-rated movie makes it an outlier, as recent studio films have shied away from asking their big stars to disrobe completely.

Both Seyfried and Sweeney are far from their Oscar hopeful roles here. Seyfried is given free rein to act as brazenly as she pleases, and she takes full advantage of that ability. Sweeney seems to have been told to be much more reserved, and unfortunately that results in too many wooden line readings. Sklenar continues his breakout streak (It Ends with Us, Drop) with a role that allows him to show more range than either Seyfried or Sweeney.

The Housemaid is an unusual type of movie to be released at a time of year when most films are either those aiming for awards or more family-friendly fare. Despite its many flaws, it’s still an enjoyable watch that features a variety of crazy scenarios not typically seen in movies nowadays.

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The Housemaid is now playing in theaters.

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