Current:Home > MarketsAn older man grooms a teenage girl in this disturbing but vital film -Elevate Capital Network
An older man grooms a teenage girl in this disturbing but vital film
View
Date:2025-04-12 07:16:48
Palm Trees and Power Lines begins in the middle of a lazy summer for 17-year-old Lea, played by a remarkable newcomer named Lily McInerny. She lives in a dull stretch of Southern California suburbia with a somewhat scattered single mom — a likable Gretchen Mol — whom she treats with indifference at best and contempt at worst.
Lea spends a lot of her time sunbathing, avoiding her summer homework, scrolling on her phone and hanging out with her friends. While she goes along with a lot of their goofball antics — she smokes and drinks with them, and has a rather perfunctory hook-up with one of them in his backseat — she also seems a little smarter, more sensitive and observant than they are.
One night at a diner, her friends decide to skip out on the check, and Lea, the only one with enough of a conscience to protest, is left holding the bag. But then a man named Tom, played by Jonathan Tucker, seems to come to her rescue and offers her a ride home in his truck. Tom is friendly, assertive and good-looking; he's also 34 years old, and it's immediately clear, from his flirtation with her, that he's a creep.
On some level, Lea seems to understand this even as she and Tom start seeing each other. She doesn't tell her mom or her friends about him, and she clearly knows that the relationship is wrong — but that's exactly what makes it so exciting. She's enormously flattered by Tom's attention, and he seems to offer her an escape from her humdrum reality.
Palm Trees and Power Lines marks a confident new filmmaking voice in the director Jamie Dack, who adapted the film from her 2018 short of the same title with her co-screenwriter, Audrey Findlay. They've written a disturbing cautionary tale about grooming and trafficking. That sounds grim, and it is, but the movie is also quietly gripping and faultlessly acted, and scrupulous in its refusal to sensationalize.
The full extent of Tom's agenda becomes clear when he takes Lea back to his place one night, and it turns out to be a rundown motel room. By that point, you'll be screaming at Lea to make a run for it, but she's already in his psychological grip. The movie captures just how swiftly yet methodically Tom creates a sense of dependency — how he lavishes Lea with attention, compliments and gifts, and gradually walls her off from her mom and her friends.
Tucker, who's been acting in movies and TV shows for years, gives a chilling, meticulously calibrated performance; you never fall under Tom's spell, but you can see how an impressionable teenager might. And McInerny, in her feature debut, shows us the depths of Lea's confusion, the way her desperation for Tom's affection and approval overpowers her better judgment.
In scene after scene, Dack ratchets up the queasy intimacy between the two characters, but she also subtly undercuts it, sometimes by shooting the actors side-by-side, giving their conversations a faintly transactional air. Through it all, the director refuses to exploit or objectify her protagonist. Even the movie's most terrifying violation is filmed with great restraint, which ultimately makes it all the harder to watch.
Dack regards Lea with enormous sympathy, but also with a certain case-study detachment; she never offers the character a way out. There were times when I wished the movie were less unsparing and more optimistic about Lea's future, but its pessimism rings awfully true. While Palm Trees and Power Lines is a story of abuse, it also captures a deeper malaise, a sense of aimlessness and loneliness that I imagine a lot of people Lea's age will identify with. It's a despairing movie, and a vital one.
veryGood! (171)
Related
- Judge says Mexican ex-official tried to bribe inmates in a bid for new US drug trial
- Mississippi must move quickly on a court-ordered redistricting, say voting rights attorneys
- Chicago exhibition center modifying windows to prevent bird strikes after massive kill last year
- Alec Baldwin trial on hold as judge considers defense request to dismiss case over disputed ammo
- Euphoria's Hunter Schafer Says Ex Dominic Fike Cheated on Her Before Breakup
- Stamp prices increase again this weekend. How much will Forever first-class cost?
- Authorities release more details in killing of California woman last seen at a bar in 2022
- Idris Elba meets with King Charles III to discuss UK youth violence: See photos
- Former Milwaukee hotel workers charged with murder after video shows them holding down Black man
- Cover star. All-Star. Superstar. A'ja Wilson needs to be an even bigger household name.
Ranking
- Paige Bueckers vs. Hannah Hidalgo highlights women's basketball games to watch
- What to watch: Let's rage with Nic Cage
- Judge throws out Rudy Giuliani’s bankruptcy case, says he flouted process with lack of transparency
- Emergency workers uncover dozens of bodies in a Gaza City district after Israeli assault
- Meet 11-year-old skateboarder Zheng Haohao, the youngest Olympian competing in Paris
- AT&T says hackers accessed records of calls and texts for nearly all its cellular customers
- Wisconsin Republicans to open new Hispanic outreach center
- Want to improve your health? Samsung says, 'Put a ring on it!'
Recommendation
Paula Abdul settles lawsuit with former 'So You Think You Can Dance' co
A US judge is reining in the use of strip searches amid a police scandal in Louisiana’s capital city
Catarina Macario off USWNT Olympic roster with injury. Coach Emma Hayes names replacement
Alabama agrees to forgo autopsy of Muslin inmate scheduled to be executed next week
IOC's decision to separate speed climbing from other disciplines paying off
Alec Baldwin's Rust Shooting Trial Dismissed With Prejudice
Montana State Hospital shuffles top leadership, again
Just as the temperature climbs, Texas towns are closing public pools to cut costs