The Housemaid

Sydney Sweeney and Amanda Seyfried
Paul Feig's The Housemaid, adapted by Rebecca Sonnenshine from the best seller by Freida McFadden, is a superior thriller, easily Feig's best film since A Simple Favor. As in that film, Feig is able to draw out the class and feminist themes in the material without distracting his audience from the technical pleasures of the yarn. The two leads, Sydney Sweeney and Amanda Seyfried playing, respectively, maid and employer, have rarely been better. The film has a strong ensemble with Brandon Sklenar, Elizabeth Perkins, Michele Morrone, and Indiana Elle all offering good turns. Feig delivers a well judged and taut thriller that is one of the least flabby Hollywood flicks of 2025.

The Housemaid was a hit, but I think it is the type of trashy seeming commercial product that is underrated by critics and the Academy. Part of this also is due to the fact that this is a "women's picture", the kind of picture that has always tended to get dismissed critically as such even when they were directed by John Stahl and Douglas Sirk. However, The Housemaid has as much to say about the way we live now as One Battle After Another does. One thread I'll pull is the film's invocation of Barry Lyndon, seemingly a distinctly different flick. However, the thematic concerns between the films are quite similar: namely the marshaling of domination via political, class, and sexual means. Like Jack Torrance in The Shining, the male monster of the id in The Housemaid is reduced to a frothing beast trapped in the labyrinth of his own design. 

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