Elisabeth Moss Rocks (Literally) in this Nightmarish, Destructive Drama (2024)

The Big Picture

  • Elisabeth Moss delivers a mesmerizing performance in Her Smell, transforming a clichéd archetype into a complex, well-rounded character.
  • The film, directed by Alex Ross Perry, employs a unique structure of five distinct vignettes to explore the life of a punk rock star, Becky Something, and her downfall and reformation.
  • Her Smell stands out for its unflinching portrayal of Becky's psychology and relationships, offering a sympathetic understanding of a self-destructive artist while capturing the euphoria of being a musician.

Life as a rock and roll star is not for the faint of heart, and if you've watched enough movies about fictional and historical artists, you're aware of the treacherous rise and fall that comes with the lifestyle. For as glorious as the peaks are, the valleys are equally tormenting. We know the beats of the average rock star's life too well, as music biopics are perhaps the most derided subgenre for their reliance on tired tropes and a burden to cram one's entire career on the screen. However, even in music biopics with the most hackneyed tropes, a stellar leading performance can salvage the genre's restrictions. While Her Smell, the 2018 Alex Ross Perry film about a troubled punk rocker told through various segments in her life, is a finely crafted exploration of a life of fame, it would be lacking potency if not for a mesmerizing performance by Elisabeth Moss, turning a clichéd archetype into a three-dimensional, well-rounded human.

Elisabeth Moss Rocks (Literally) in this Nightmarish, Destructive Drama (1)
her smell

R

Drama

A self-destructive punk rocker struggles with sobriety while trying to recapture the creative inspiration that led her band to success.

Release Date
April 12, 2019

Director
Alex Ross Perry
Cast
Elisabeth Moss , Cara Delevingne , Dan Stevens , Agyness Deyn , Gayle Rankin , Ashley Benson

Runtime
135

'Her Smell's Creative Spin on the Music Genre

If her role as Peggy Olson in Mad Men showed the world that Elisabeth Moss was one of the finest actors of her generation, then Her Smell was the ultimate confirmation. For seven seasons of the acclaimed AMC advertising drama, Moss played a timid but persistent secretary who asserts her creativity and autonomy in the toxic workforce. As Becky Something, the once acclaimed punk rock star fallen from grace in Her Smell, she is nothing like the humble secretary-turned-copywriter of Sterling Cooper. The film follows Becky Something (Moss), the lead vocalist for the band, Something She, who alienates her family and drives away band members due to her self-destructive personality and substance abuse. Perry forgoes the traditional music biopic narrative for a structure evocative of Danny Boyle's Steve Jobs, where we follow her downfall and reformation through five distinct vignettes.

Alex Ross Perry, the indie director of Listen Up Philip, brings a frantic and unnerving quality to this behind-the-scenes look at a punk rock band's unraveling. The five segments conclude with monumental blow-ups or resolutions, but selecting where to drop into Becky Something's life feels spontaneous. Perry translates her instability through the jittery movements of a handheld camera. Once she cleans up her act in the latter two segments, the camera is static. Even when the story shifts away from the concert stage, the reverberations of a loud rock show linger. The muffled sound of the cheering audience and band currently on stage echo throughout the scenes set backstage. For a chamber drama, primarily consisting of people talking in rooms, Her Smell pays incredible attention to the staging of the sequences, with each setting feeling like a lived-in world with distinct characteristics.

Elisabeth Moss Pours Her Heart and Soul in 'Her Smell'

Perry, with his emphasis on intimate handheld camera work, evokes the films of John Cassavetes, whose films, A Woman Under the Influence and Opening Night (set in a similar behind-the-curtains show business milieu as Her Smell), focus on women whose worlds are seemingly collapsing around them. Elisabeth Moss channels the gravitas and vulnerability of Gena Rowlands in these respective films. Much like Rowlands' roles, written and directed by her husband, Cassavetes, Becky Something calls for capital "A" acting. Under the wrong hands, the screaming, volatility, and rambunctious energy could devolve into histrionic stereotypes. Luckily, the audience is exposed to Becky as a positive spirit in montages depicting the band during their halcyon days spliced between the vignettes. Her personality has not defined her entire life. Instead, something pernicious about the industry and life of fame has forced her to become a toxic figure.

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The term "tour de force," is used perhaps too liberally in film criticism, but this undeniably applies to Moss' performance in Her Smell. Not only is she believable as a new-wave punk rocker, but she harnesses the energy of a musician who lives on the edge 24/7.While most biopics implicitly glorify the debauchery and excess of rock stars, Perry's film is a continuously grating and taxing exercise to watch. It may not be for a wide audience, but the grueling tone and suffocating claustrophobia force the viewer to confront the angst of Becky's life. The movie probes into Becky's psychology beyond the immediate effect of her substance abuse. When watching, you feel as though her stubbornness, insecurity, and selfishness are the root of her problems and not just the direct effects of drugs, which certainly inflame her poisonous aura.

What makes Her Smell stand out is Perry’s decision to focus on the psychology of Becky Something through her relationships with others, and her self-destructive ability to drag everyone down to her neurosis. In an interview with Vulture, Moss, describes her interpretation of Becky, stating, "The guiding idea for me was that she doesn’t think she’s abusing anybody. When she’s angry at somebody, she thinks she’s 100 percent in the right." Her narcissism seeps through her co-members of Something She and the Akergirls, the more successful band that Becky eventually starts opening for. In the third vignette, characters, including Akergirls member Crassie Cassie (Cara Delevingne), manager Howard Goodman (Eric Stoltz), and Becky's mother Ania (Virginia Madsen), are all inflicted with the same angst and cynicism as Becky, who desperately await for her arrival. Those in her circle vow to reform her, but she is so rooted in paranoia and insecurity that she takes any advice as an affront to her credibility. Moss identified Becky's "crazy mix of extreme confidence and extreme insecurity." This dichotomy is the backbone of her hostile personality.

'Her Smell' Tracks the Evolution of a Troubled Punk Star Through a Series of Vignettes

The structure of Her Smell not only creates an intimate, documentary-like portrayal of the story, but it also tracks Becky's evolution from unrelenting egoism, desperate insecurity, and humble reformation. Even though the performance calls for grand emotions, Moss subtly demonstrates her evolution throughout the movie. This prevents the film from being stale, as she distinguishes her mannerisms and behavior between the first three segments, loosely defined as the "bad times." In the latter two segments, a sober Becky reconciling with her ex-husband, Danny (Dan Stevens), and Something She's reunion performance, respectively, Moss calibrates her exuberance and eccentric personality into a meditative reflection. She's still struggling with demons, but her path of self-redemption is sincere.

The greatest badge of honor of Her Smell is its disinterest in apologizing for Becky Something being an independent and creative woman. It's typical for films about self-destructive people to condemn their subjects too harshly, usually to maintain a dark and gritty tone. Alex Ross Perry's direction is unflinching during the downswing, but he graciously blesses his protagonist with a sympathetic understanding. Similarly, in movies about the torturing nature of art and entertainment, filmmakers tend to establish a loathing relationship with the art form, but Her Smell captures the euphoria of being a musician. The passion is crystallized during the final segment when Becky returns to the stage with feelings of apprehension, but also eagerness. Like the attitude of Becky Something, Her Smell pulls no punches, and it never restricts itself to one emotion. This would've been nearly impossible without its anchor, Elisabeth Moss, who gave a performance that left reverberations in its wake.

Her Smell is available to stream on Prime Video in the U.S.

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Elisabeth Moss Rocks (Literally) in this Nightmarish, Destructive Drama (2024)
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