Film Review #18: DON'T WORRY DARLING

Weng Leong • March 21, 2023

 

Film Review #18: DON'T WORRY DARLING

*This film review may contain plot spoilers, reader discretion is advised.*

Film still from Don't Worry Darling


Raunchy little misbecomings of fourth-wave feminism are beset in a world of questions and thrills that leave viewers hooked in and horned up. Don’t Worry Darling is Olivia Wilde’s newest and juiciest movie both on and off the screen.


 Set in a 1950s company town called Victory Town, the movie shows a happy couple Alice (Florence Pugh) and Jack (Harry Styles) going about their daily lives: Jack goes to work while Alice cleans the house, makes the bed and cooks the meals. Their neighbours also have similar lifestyles, and the wives sometimes go over to each other’s houses to gossip, practise ballet and go shopping.

 

 The two things they’re not allowed to do are: venture outside of town, and enquire about their husbands’ jobs. A series of weird events suddenly starts happening in the neighbourhood, which leads Alice to: venture outside of town, and enquire about her husband’s job.

Bruce lee

Film still from Bullet Train


From there, we are led on a thrilling adventure full of twists and turns (and sex) to figure out the mystery of Victory Town.


 I think people will really enjoy this movie, for the wrong reasons. Were the sex scenes eye-grabbing? Yes. Did they add value to the movie in any artistic or emotional way? No. But is Harry Styles hot? Yes, very.


 Styles does a good enough job for a non-professional actor and plays the role of the goody-two-shoes husband perfectly - and impressively makes filling the shoes of Shia LaBeouf (who left the production for unknown reasons) look like an easy job. Meanwhile, his on-screen lover is stellar - this subpar story did not stop Florence Pugh from putting up the performance of a lifetime. There are moments in the movie where the audience feels removed from the story, but the one constant is that Alice lives through Florence Pugh for the whole two hours. The praise she is getting for carrying this movie on her back is absolutely valid.

Film still from Don't Worry Darling


 Chris Pine is also perfect as Victory’s inspiring CEO, Frank. Viewers can expect a challenge to solve the mystery of Victory Town as Pine goes around with an air of confidence that neither Alice nor the audience will be able to do so. Nick Kroll plays Dean, a side character that makes so much impact with the few lines he is given that I think this man is my Harry Styles. Dean is, on the surface, also another goody-two-shoes husband but the actor switches up so quickly to be your toxic secret-corporate-ladder-climbing colleague that it's super entertaining and fun to watch.


 What would have been better was for the story to push the characters further into tensions: maybe goody-two-shoes Harry Styles can become a slightly crazier Harry Styles (so that the teenagers in the cinema will stop squealing every time he appears on screen). Maybe the ending could have been better mapped out so that people leave the cinema intrigued rather than confused.

Film still from Don't Worry Darling


Despite its flaws, Don’t Worry Darling has rushed women and Gen Zs to the cinema in North America, thanks to Harry Styles’ ‘Star Power’. Critics are confused as to whether this should be termed as something bold and empowering from Olivia Wilde or whether the script itself should be put back into the recycling bin for unwanted Black Mirror story ideas. At least I was genuinely entertained by the movie. This is definitely not the finest piece of art cinema has to offer but it can entertain you for that two hours or so.



——————————————————————————-


This review is published as part of *SCAPE’s Film Critics Lab: A Writing Mentorship Programme, organized by The Filmic Eye with support from Singapore Film Society and Sinema.


About the Author: Weng Leong prides himself in having watched Parasite before it won Best Picture in 2020 and will gladly mansplain to anyone why Memories of Murder is Bong Joon-Ho’s best film. He is most often seen talking about film and politics instead of actually studying at SMU.

BLOG

By Jing January 31, 2026
Film Review #189: Withered Blossoms
By Chinmaya January 28, 2026
Film Review #188: Bugonia
By Kaela Teh January 28, 2026
The Lost Youth and Digital Loneliness of All About Lily Chou-Chou
By Jing January 17, 2026
Seeing from a Distance: Modern Life through Edward Yang’s Lens in Yi Yi
By Rachel Xia January 17, 2026
Is the Person You Once Loved Still by Your Side? 那个曾经深爱的人还在你身边吗? A reflection on Once We Were Us 观《Once We Were Us》有感
By Han Yiheng January 16, 2026
Commentary: Agnès Varda’s Lessons in Humility
By Jun Sen January 15, 2026
Covert Operations, the Liberation of Truth and the Need to Remember – The Universal Rebellion  Seen in The Secret Agent
By Stephanie December 31, 2025
Feeling Death: Review of Kiarostami’s Taste of Cherry (1997)
By Ivan Chin December 31, 2025
Film Review #182: YI YI
By Jing December 16, 2025
The Music of Memory: Form, Intimacy, and Musicality in Joachim Trier’s Sentimental Value
More Posts