Skip to main content

With Netflix’s Unicorn Store, Brie Larson Says She Selfishly Made an “Aggressively Positive” Film

I spent a full day of TIFF 2017 hanging out inside Brie Larson’s candy and glitter stocked Unicorn Store. In the morning, I watched the Oscar-winning actress answer audience questions at Nespresso’s Coffee with Creators event. In the afternoon, I watched her screen her directorial debut at the Ryerson theatre to a room of teary-eyed fans and skeptical critics. Post-premiere, I joined the cast at a nearby gay bar, where there was a donut wall, confetti blasters and a barista who would draw your face on a latte. In a festival full of moody period pieces and politically-charged dramas, Larson’s sugar-coated Unicorn Store offered a welcome toothache.

“It’s kind of aggressively positive,” Larson said of her film at the Coffee with Creators panel. “That was first a choice I made selfishly, because I had made a lot of darker films that were about showing the dark corners of the world, and that’s a really important task for filmmakers to take. We need that. When you’re in a theatre, you’re emphasizing, you’re watching, you’re becoming somebody else who has a different background than you. But in all of that I was starting to lose this part of me, that was like this inner child that was needing something, that was needing to not feel like the world was totally falling apart. What’s available to us at all times is childlike play and innocence. Even in the face of things that are scary, in the face of darkness…it’s still there.”

Unicorn Store follows the story of Kit, an art-school dropout who doesn’t want to grow up. She tried to: Kit puts on her mom’s skirt suit, takes on a temp job and forces herself to drink black coffee. Then, she gets an invite to the Unicorn Store and is offered her very own unicorn. Between the pop tarts, mystical creatures and overall rainbow-confetti aesthetic, Unicorn Store is almost sickly sweet.

The reviews from it’s 2017 debut, however, were a little salty. Critics complained that the film was too fluffy and twee, noting its “fatal overdose of whimsical quirk.” Most of those reviews were from middle-age dudes. While, rationally, I can understand some of their complaints—the chemistry between Larson and Mamoudou Athieplayed, who plays a potential love interest for Kit, just isn’t there—I think most of these film critics are safely outside Unicorn Store‘s demo. For once, this isn’t a movie isn’t for them. “I’m going to make a film that’s extremely feminine and soft,” Larson said at the time of the premiere, “and I’m going to ask men to take a step forward and enter my space. I’ve entered your space for most of my life; you can the step and enter my space this time.”

One man more than willing to enter Larson’s pink, frilly, feminine space was Samuel L. Jackson. In the post-premiere Q&A, Larson called the legendary actor—who plays the Unicorn Store salesman—her “Fairy Godmother,” citing how he will check in if she’s not Instagramming enough. Jackson has co-starred with Larson in both Kong: Skull Island and, most recently, Captain Marvel. When he found out about Larson’s first film he stormed into her dressing room to demand the part. When Samuel L. Jackson insists on a major role in your directorial debut, you know you’re someone special.

After it’s TIFF 2017 debut, the Unicorn Store went silent, with Larson’s blockbuster Marvel gig seemingly swallowing her independent project. Nearly two years later, however, the movie has found its perfect home: a streaming service where just about anything can find its audience. Netflix, it seems, is ready to embrace this glitter-bomb with open arms.

 

Watch the trailer for Unicorn Store, streaming now on Netflix:

The post With Netflix’s <em>Unicorn Store</em>, Brie Larson Says She Selfishly Made an “Aggressively Positive” Film appeared first on FASHION Magazine.



from FASHION Magazine http://bit.ly/2UiPVmF

Popular posts from this blog

I Tried the Viral One-Leg Jeans, and I Got Plenty of Stares

If you're into fashion and an avid TikTok scroller, you've probably come across the viral and somewhat controversial Coperni one-leg jeans . People who got their hands on them are asking followers how they should style them - and even whether or not they should keep them. Those who are still on a waitlist or are simply curious about the trend are going so far as to DIY the jeans by taking a scissor to one leg of an old pair. I, on the other hand, dared to step into the Romeo Hunte Black One Leg Pant ($232, originally $725), an alternative take on the same silhouette that's even more eye-catching (which, how is that possible?). These jeans were, without a doubt, one of the most polarizing looks I've ever worn - and I've tried some pretty divisive clothing, from Skims butt-enhancing shapewear to the brand's famous push-up nipple bra , and many a sheer naked dress . After wearing the jeans around town to run errands and obviously attracting some attention (st...

Oh, to Be Pedro Pascal's Sparkly Cardigan

Never have we been more envious of an inanimate object than when Pedro Pascal stepped out in a sparkly cardigan this week. As soon as we saw him walking the streets of London wearing the glittery knit, we longed to swap places with it - to be enrobing the heartthrob, catching the attention of random passersby, sparking internet discourse, and ultimately taking responsibility for his style breakout. Pascal has been serving look after look while promoting " The Last of Us " season one and "The Mandalorian" season three this year, working with stylists Julie Ragolia and Fabio Immediato . His latest came on Feb. 23 when he arrived to a radio interview wearing the shiny cardigan in question: a long button-down sweater made of silver foil yarn and created by menswear label 4SDesigns. He layered it over a sheer brown tank top and finished the look with black pants, leather boots, and his usual chunky-framed glasses. Just one day prior, the actor stopped by a photo call...