MAXXXINE (2024)

Studio:   A24
Director: Ti West
Writer:   Ti West
Producer: Mia Goth, Kevin Turen, Harrison Kreiss, Jacob Jaffke, Ti West
Stars:    Mia Goth, Elizabeth Debicki, Moses Sumney, Michelle Monaghan, Bobby Cannavale, Halsey, Lily Collins, Simon Prast, Sophie Thatcher, Uli Latukefu, Giancarlo Esposito, Kevin Bacon

Review Score:


Summary:

Six years after escaping a traumatizing massacre, adult film star Maxine Minx encounters a mysterious serial killer as she navigates Hollywood in 1985.


Synopsis:     

Review:

Until a rumored fourth film possibly sees release, "MaXXXine" completes writer/director Ti West's trilogy of Mia Goth vehicles that began in 2022 with "X" (review here) and then "Pearl" (review here). For anyone coming into this franchise out of order, or without the time or opportunity to see all three, I've heard it said "Pearl" can be safely skipped since Goth plays an entirely different character in that film, but "X" provides background context for her other role, Maxine Minx, that would be arguably indispensable for getting the most out of "MaXXXine."

I say "arguably" because I personally would argue it's easy enough to understand the full scope of "MaXXXine" without knowing what happened in "X." It might even be an intriguing experience since you'd get to know Maxine from a fresh perspective, without the baggage brought by memories of the murders and mayhem she was previously involved in. "MaXXXine," which takes place in 1985, may mislead a newcomer into thinking Maxine did more dirty deeds than she actually did in "X," which took place in 1979. But flashbacks fill in enough blanks so attentive viewers can get up to speed on critical bullet points as "MaXXXine" lays out a new serial killer whodunit to be solved.

Since the events of "X," Maxine made a move to Hollywood where she's still in the throes of adult entertainment, working as a porn star and peep show performer amid auditioning for a mainstream break in a hot horror sequel, "The Puritan II." Stardom remains out of reach for now, yet bodies still have a habit of dropping around her. As Maxine maneuvers through semi-seedy streets dealing with shady agents and sleazy private investigators, someone appears hellbent on butchering controversial hustlers she comes into contact with.

Where "X" aimed to evoke the grittiness of early slashers, and "Pearl" turned itself into a Technicolor drama influenced by the heyday of movie musicals, "MaXXXine" sets its sights on delivering a gory mystery that would be right at home on a neon-lit marquee underneath a Dario Argento giallo or Brian DePalma thriller. In 2009, Ti West made a terrific throwback '80s horror movie with "The House of the Devil," whose retro aesthetic was successful in part because it was also subtly employed. West is more on the nose with "MaXXXine." I'm not sure cutting away to a close-up on a can of New Coke does anything more than provoke a brief nostril laugh from viewers of a certain age. Still, West gains back lost ground like that with lush, sometimes lascivious looks at a side of 1980s Hollywood that would be challenging to recreate in the 21st century for anyone without his artistic eye.

Even without the narrative, "MaXXXine" takes viewers on a unique tour of Tinseltown not seen since Quentin Tarantino's "Once Upon a Time in Hollywood." I'm never certain how much this appeals to those outside of that geography, but as a longtime Los Angeles resident fascinated by the city's rich history, I appreciate what West and his creative collaborators achieve in finding the right locations, looks, and cinematic style to make the movie feel like it could have dropped out of a decades-old time capsule.

Selling the setting and telling a tidy tale are objectives that sometimes butt heads, however. With ongoing news of The Night Stalker murders draping a dreadful backdrop, "MaXXXine" creates its canvas from a town already on edge during the peak of Satanic Panic. Weirdly though, The Night Stalker's repeated mentions don't amount to much more than a distraction. Anyone who knows anything about Richard Ramirez will know right away that he cannot be the killer in "MaXXXine" given their different movements and M.O.s. The same goes for some of the other suggestions "MaXXXine" serves up as potential suspects. All of these red herrings flounder on the shore while the movie gently moves away from the mystery and more into a character study often sidetracked by slaughter.

Circling back to a previous point, the killer's ultimate identity might have more bite with people who've seen "X." But honestly, I had a hard time recalling how much that person featured in the first film, if at all, reaffirming my assertion that "MaXXXine" doesn't need the other movies to stand on its own as an old school thriller, midnight movie slasher, or even as an intimate look inside a troubled person's life.

What I would add onto that last point is, in my opinion, "Pearl" had a more interesting persona to pick apart. "MaXXXine" has a lot going on that doesn't directly involve its featured player, leaving the film's focus to dart around from dissecting her psyche to dissecting victims to detouring into (mis)directions leading to disappointing dead ends. That probably shouldn't be surprising considering how, by design, these three films experiment with exploring all sorts of threads, themes, and genres. This is a scattered series whose entries have divided viewers regarding relative quality. For "MaXXXine," I'd simply say it works as a captivating creeper populated by captivating personalities. Yet when I think about its meandering moments, like Maxine's director delivering mentoring monologues meant to layer a veneer of deeper meaning motivating Maxine's arc, I'm just not sure what "MaXXXine" really has to say once its B-movie bloodshed is all said and done.

Review Score: 65