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    Movie Review

    Aubrey Plaza scams and schemes in solid Emily the Criminal

    Alex Bentley
    Aug 12, 2022 | 5:55 pm
    Theo Rossi in Emily the Criminalplay icon
    Theo Rossi in Emily the Criminal.
    Photo courtesy of Roadside Attractions and Vertical Entertainment

    Contrary to what many movies would have you believe, not all people who commit crimes are evil people. A good number of them go down the wrong path because they find themselves in a situation where committing a crime is the only solution that seems possible, with the hope of getting back to the straight and narrow soon thereafter.

    That’s the kind of circumstance for Emily (Aubrey Plaza) in Emily the Criminal. She works as a delivery driver for a restaurant/catering company, a low-paying job that does nothing to make a dent in the $70,000 of student loan debt she has. The stress of the debt boils over in a couple of job interviews, giving her few other options.

    When a co-worker gives her number to call to make $200 in an hour for a mysterious job, she stumbles into a criminal enterprise. Using stolen credit cards provided by Youcef (Theo Rossi), she and others buy merchandise to be resold on the black market. But when Youcef takes a shine to her, Emily gets sucked in to something that’s bigger than she could have expected.

    Writer/director John Patton Ford, making his feature debut, puts together a solid film, immersing viewers in Emily’s desperation and showing how easy one could be seduced by “easy” money. Even though her early work for Youcef results in some trauma, the crushing amount of debt that she has keeps her hooked, especially when Youcef offers to let her set up her own side hustle.

    Likewise, the film maintains viewer interest by shifting its goals. At heart, Emily believes herself to be a good person, so she keeps trying to do the right thing even when she wants to do the wrong thing. This constant balancing of the scales keeps the viewer on her side despite some actions that should make people question her motives.

    Still, after a strong start, the story starts to fade toward the end. The bond between Emily and Youcef is never that strong, and so escalating events involving the two of them come off as less important than they should. There are also multiple instances where it seems like things should go more sideways for Emily than they do, lessening the believability factor.

    While Plaza has perfected the aloof character dating from her days on Parks and Recreation, this role allows her to show off a different side of herself. She is more vulnerable and tougher at the same time, the latter aided by a slight New Jersey accent. Rossi, best known from Sons of Anarchy, is the only other person who makes a real impact on the film.

    Emily the Criminal is a type of morality tale where the morals get squishier the more the film goes along. You may not agree with everything Emily does, but thanks to a really good performance by Plaza, you’ll still be rooting for her.

    ---

    Emily the Criminal opens in theaters on August 12.

    Theo Rossi in Emily the Criminal.

    Theo Rossi in Emily the Criminal
    Photo courtesy of Roadside Attractions and Vertical Entertainment
    Theo Rossi in Emily the Criminal.
    movies
    news/entertainment

    cult classic

    Performer John Cameron Mitchell celebrate 25 years of Hedwig at Houston show

    Eric Sandler
    Dec 23, 2025 | 3:30 pm
    Hedwig and the Angry Inch movie still
    Courtesy of John Cameron Mitchell
    Hedwin and the Angry Inch will celebrate its 25th anniversary in 2026.

    Next year will mark the 25th anniversary of Hedwig and the Angry Inch, the 2001 cult queer musical and directorial debut of veteran stage actor John Cameron Mitchell. First debuting in Sundance before hitting theaters later that summer, Hedwig (based on the 1998 off-Broadway play Mitchell co-wrote and starred in) became a favorite for those who like their rock musicals anarchic and androgynous.

    Mitchell will be celebrating Hedwig’s anniversary early – right here in Houston. This Sunday, December 28, the film will be shown at legendary Montrose club Numbers, and Mitchell will be there for a live director’s commentary and a post-screening live performance. The screening is one part of a day-long event for Mitchell, who will be teaching a sold-out master class at Cafe Brasil later that day.

    Local nonprofit Arthouse Houston reached out to Mitchell about revisiting Hedwig in H-Town. “I got good buddies from there,” the El Paso-born military brat, 62, tells CultureMap during a Zoom call from his New Orleans home. “My friend Amber Martin, who's from the area and who I’ve sung and DJed with for many, many years, is coming – especially for this. She used to go to Numbers as a kid. My friend Jonathan Caouette, who directed the film Tarnation, lives there. He used to go to Visions in the '80s. So, it's kind of fun to come to an old, classic club and show the film, do some songs, hang around, and do a drunk live director's commentary – or maybe stoned, depending on my feelings that day.”

    John Cameron Mitchell John Cameron Mitchell will perform at Numbers this Sunday, December 28.Courtesy of John Cameron Mitchell

    For Mitchell, revisiting Hedwig takes him back to a simpler time, when an actor/playwright could get a film about a gay, East German rocker whose signature song is about his botched sex reassignment surgery (now you know where “angry inch” comes from) financed and distributed by a major studio. Even though Hedwig flopped in theaters, it would eventually gain a cult following. Mitchell would follow it up with an even more provocative film, the 2005 ensemble comedy Shortbus, which featured actors engaging in graphic, unsimulated sex.

    “That was the last golden age of independent film in the U.S.,” he says. “It was the '90s and 2000s, which pretty much ended at the financial collapse of 2006, which coincided with the rise of the streamers, which really put the final nail in the coffin for independent film as we know it in terms of it being a viable commercial thing. So, a lot of people made fewer films. They had to have more stars. They had to have more Oscar gloss. And the habit of going to see the best-reviewed film that week just because the critics were telling you went away, of course.”

    MItchell still does the acting thing from time-to-time – in February, he’ll take over as Mary Todd Lincoln in Cole Escola’s Broadway drag hit Oh Mary!. But, these days, he;s been teaching master classes and film courses at various colleges (like his “Problemagic Cinema” course at the University of Michigan).

    Along with teaching them film history, he encourages his students to take things – whether it’s a film they want to make or a movement they want to start – in their own hands. “I'm telling my students it's like this: now is the time to create a new kind of underground film, and other things,” he says. “The big question, of course, is how do you get them out there? How do you monetize them so there can be more? I can't quite answer that, but I also know that when corporations abandon a certain form, that's the time to step up and take it back.”

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