HomeEntertainmentAnora review: Sean Baker's screwball comedy is an anti-cinderella tale with strong eat-the-rich sentiment

Anora review: Sean Baker's screwball comedy is an anti-cinderella tale with strong eat-the-rich sentiment

Anora is an anti-cindrella tale where the glass shoe doesn't really fit. Or rather, when Cindrella finds her prince charming, his family gets their marriage annulled. The subtle commentary on social inequality and the portrayal of stigma around sex work is simply phenomenal.

November 16, 2024 / 19:19 IST
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Anora
Anora

First thing is first. The marketing team for Anora deserves an applause for keeping the Hangover-esque screwball comedy part (arguably the strongest segment in the film) a secret. Two adorable Russian henchmen, Igor (Yura Barisov) and Garnik (Vache Tovmasyan) try their best to gag, assault and overpower Annie (Anora, played by the ravishIng, supremely talented Mikey Madison) as she tries to escape the mansion she is trapped in.

Anora Movie: Plot

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It all starts witj Annie, who worked as an exotic dancer in Brooklyn, marrying the rich son of a Russian oligarch Evan (Vanya Zacharov, played by Mark Eydelshteyn). The couple move into their mansion but soon land into trouble when Evan's father finds out that his son has married a ‘prostitute’, bringing disrepute to their family.

What follows next is an absolutely batshit crazy sequence of events where Evan, like a true gentleman, leaves his wife with two Russian henchman as they gag her, assault her and coerce her into cooperating with them. In a hilarious scene, Toros (Karren Karagulian) asks the trio to walk to a nearby club because he doesnt want to park his car again.