Categories: Movie News

Edgar Wright on the Scoldy Subgenre That Helped Spark Last Night in Soho

Published by
Margeaux Sippell

Edgar Wright’s Last Night in Soho may seem to have a few obvious influences, including 1960s horror films and stories of swinging London around the dawn of rock ‘n’ roll. But Wright tells MovieMaker he was also fascinated and a bit confounded by a largely forgotten genre: scolding 1950s and ’60s dramas in which a young woman is punished for daring to want it all.

Last Night in Soho stars Thomasin McKenzie as a young fashion student fascinated by visions of two 1960s characters played by Anya Taylor-Joy and Matt Smith.

“Once I had the idea for this film, rather than watching a lot of psychological thrillers and horror movies, I was sort of more watching a lot of dramas of the time, like social dramas,” Wright recalled.

“And there’s a big sort of subgenre of films, especially British films, about young girls going to London. And having the temerity to want to do well in show business and being roundly punished — usually by a male writer. So it felt like it was like a stinging rebuke against women’s liberation, this idea of, How dare you want to come to the city and make it big? And there’s many, many films like that, which I thought was so interesting and quite dark in itself, in terms of, Who are these films for?”

He adds: “It almost felt like the old guard trying to slap down the younger generation. And so in that sense, there’s an element with Soho where you get to watch two of those movies — one in the modern-day and one in the past. So the idea of having twin narratives in two decades was really fascinating to me.”

Also Read: Anya Taylor-Joy’s Last Night in Soho Character Wasn’t Originally Going to Speak

In Last Night in Soho, Taylor-Joy plays a glamorous wannabe singer. Smith plays a handsome, mysterious man who takes an interest in her and her career. Taylor-Joy and Smith’s arc is a bit similar to that of the central relationship in the 1957 British film The Flesh Is Weak, one of Wright’s reference points.

“It was interesting for Matt and Anya, who are in the ’60s scenes, to look at those films just in terms of performance, because they thought it was something where you could contrast the performance styles between the modern-day scenes and the ‘60s scenes,” Wright said. “It’s sort of a different way of acting in those films… and I wanted to kind of subtly show that, which I think they did brilliantly. It’s almost like Matt and Anya were approaching it from the idea of movie actors at the time. Whereas Thomasin, in the modern-day, is adopting a more naturalistic approach. That’s not to say that what Matt and Anya are doing is not believable. But because it’s in the sort of ’60s portion of the film, it’s more in the style of those dramas of the time.”

But The Flesh Is Weak isn’t the only film that influenced Last Night in Soho. Wright gave his cast a long list of movies to help inspire them and set the tone — and McKenzie tore through them.

“It was educationally really great because it exposed me to things that I hadn’t ever watched before… I watched Rosemary’s Baby and Don’t Look Now and really obscure ones like Beat Girl,” McKenzie said.

“I wasn’t expecting her to watch all 50 but I think she did,” Wright laughed.

To get a taste of Wright’s inspiration, you can watch The Flesh Is Weak and Beat Girl in full on YouTube below:

Last Night in Soho opens in theaters in the U.S. on Oct. 29. More of our interview with Wright and McKenzie can be found in our fall print issue, on newsstands Oct. 15.

Main Image: John Derek and Milly Vitale in The Flesh Is Weak (1957).

Margeaux Sippell

Recent Posts

  • Gallery

The 13 Best SNL Sketches in the Show’s Nearly 50 Years

Here are the 13 best SNL sketches in the nearly 50 years of Saturday Night…

9 hours ago
  • Gallery

12 Movie Sequels Better Than the Originals

These 12 movie sequels better than the original disprove the notion that the first movie…

9 hours ago
  • Movie News

Ethan Hawke Tells Young People to Watch Old Movies: ‘It’s on Your Damn Phone, Watch It!’

Ethan Hawke hopes he doesn't sound like the "old man yells at cloud" meme when…

1 day ago
  • Interview

Joanna Arnow and Sean Baker Discuss The Feeling That the Time for Doing Something Has Passed

Sean Baker is telling Joanna Arnow how her film The Feeling That the Time for…

1 day ago
  • Gallery

Blazing Saddles: 12 Behind the Scenes Stories of Mel Brooks’ Absurdist Western Classic

Mel Brooks' Blazing Saddles, released 50 years ago, is widely considered one of the funniest…

1 day ago
  • Gallery

12 Great TV Shows With Unlikable Lead Characters

These shows with unlikable lead characters prove you don't need to like someone to love…

1 day ago