Review: College party fiasco goes from satire to terror in the impressive ‘Emergency’

RJ Cyler and Donald Elise Watkins in “Emergency.”照片:Quantrell Colbert / Amazon Studios

“It’s not what it looks like” is both the marketing tagline for “Emergency” and an accurate description of this ingenious independent film.

The opening night feature at January’s Sundance Film Festival and deserving winner of its Waldo Salt Screenwriting Award, “Emergency” first appears to be a college party comedy with social commentary. Relentless unease soon takes over, though, then palpable terror. There’s also absurd yet totally credible satire of cultural attitudes — from the latest in unexamined prejudices to the confusing speech codes designed to redress them — and an exploration of friendship that’s always amusing yet dead serious at heart.

导演凯里·威廉姆斯(Carey Williams)和编剧K.D.从2018年的同名短片扩展。达维拉(Dávila)的功能将这些元素和更多的冲突元素融合到永不失去的蛇形情节中。“紧急情况”在5月20日星期五的精选剧院开幕,并在一周后开始在Amazon Prime视频上播放。

Sean (RJ Cyler of “Me and Earl and the Dying Girl”) and Kunle (Donald Elise Watkins) are best friends about to graduate from the fictional Buchanan College. Sean is a streetwise stoner, and Kunle is the straitlaced son of African doctors. They josh each other about which one is more genuinely Black, but agree that they need to set a precedent on the inaugural night of spring break by becoming the first students of color to conquer the Legendary circuit, hitting all seven of the frat parties around town.

Sebastian Chacon (left), Donald Elise Watkins and RJ Cyler in the harrowing “Emergency.”照片:Quantrell Colbert / Amazon Studios

Complications arise when they stop by the house they share with nerdy Carlos (Sebastian Chacon) to find a blond woman passed out in the living room. The guys want to do the right thing but, America being America, know what three men of color standing over a maybe roofied white girl would look like to 911 responders. After much ethical and moral pondering, the three pack the puking princess into Sean’s minivan and attempt to reach a hospital as inconspicuously as possible.

Sobriety checkpoints, neighborhood watch Karens and drunk revelers create subsequent roadblocks. Little Emma — who’s played by Maddie Nichols in one of the all-time-great blitzed performances — stirs up more trouble in her sporadic moments of consciousness. Meanwhile, her frantic older sister Maddie (Sabrina Carpenter), along with more rational pal Alice (Madison Thompson) and a toga-clad frat bro (Diego Abraham), put down their beer cups and set off on their own wayward pursuit.

Funny, huh? Well, certainly clever enough, but except for a handful of laugh-out-loud gags — a visit to one of Sean’s relatives generates the best one — the humor here is more like, should I chuckle or cringe? Privileged Kunle, who’s correctly described as “Black excellence,” has no understanding of the potentially deadly consequences his buddy is so paranoid about, and it strains their friendship as the night careens toward proving one of them right.

Dávila says some of “Emergency” was inspired by her Mexican American relatives’ assumptions that police are out to get them, so they adjust their behavior in public accordingly. She draws endless humor, tension and appropriate grief out of that single idea (and other good ones, too), which Williams turns into thematic glue for tones and tropes that don’t naturally mesh. An incisive portrait of Black male sensibilities is painted by the intense third act, while obtuseness evolves into understanding on most of the white characters’ parts.

Sabrina Carpenter in “Emergency.”照片:Quantrell Colbert / Amazon Studios

尽管这听起来可能会以圣丹斯独立的敏感性过度劳累,但“紧急情况”演员保持真实。无论它们代表什么原型,每个角色都有细微的令人信服的生活。肖恩(Sean)和库尔(Kunle)尤其如此,这就是为什么我们不只是想看到他们在夜晚生存;Cyler和Watkins做到了这一点,因此我们需要他们的友谊才能完好无损。

N“Emergency”:Comedy drama. Starring RJ Cyler, Donald Elise Watkins, Sebastian Chacon and Maddie Nichols. Directed by Carey Williams. (R. 105 minutes.) In select theaters Friday, May 20. Available to stream on Amazon Prime Video starting Friday, May 27.

  • Bob Strauss
    Bob StraussBob Strauss is a Los Angeles freelance journalist who has covered movies, television and the business of Hollywood for more than three decades.