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Dead Ringers review: Rachel Weisz doubles down in a rework of Cronenberg’s shocker

Prime Video unleashes a messy miniseries on fertility and women’s health

TV Reviews Dead Ringers
Dead Ringers review: Rachel Weisz doubles down in a rework of Cronenberg’s shocker
Rachel Weisz Photo: Niko Tavernise/Prime Video

From an obstetric standpoint, twins aren’t really mysterious. An egg splits after fertilization, or multiple fertilized eggs implant successfully. Fertility treatments have even made multiple births more common. In art, though, from Shakespeare to The Silent Twins, identical twins are weird and magical, handy metaphors for split selves, our better angel and inner demon. David Cronenberg blurred that neat dichotomy to chilling effect in Dead Ringers (1988), in which mirrored yet emotionally divergent gynecologists descend into a drug-fueled existential crisis. Prime Video’s female-centered riff on the movie (which premieres April 21) keeps the madness, gore, and eerie scarlet scrubs, but pumps it full of hormones.

If you’re not automatically opposed to TV reboots (a Fatal Attraction series, really?), the best way to enjoy Dead Ringers is to put the film out of mind. Cronenberg’s flesh melancholy is there, filtered through multiple female perspectives and doled out (a bit leisurely) in six hours of elegant yet stomach-clenching narrative. (Alien gynecological instruments didn’t make the cut.) Flipping the body-horror scenario, we no longer have a bifurcated Jeremy Irons trying to revenge himself on female reproductive organs. It’s now a silken, ferocious Rachel Weisz as two damaged doctors chasing wholeness in a field that treats pregnancy like a disease and babies like fetishized commodities.

Beverly and Elliot Mantle are OB-GYN stars at New York’s fictional Westcott Memorial Hospital. Beverly is the tactful, sensitive one, desperate for a baby after numerous miscarriages. Her hair’s pulled back and parted in the middle. Elliot is the cruel, hedonistic one, hungry for sex, food, control. Hair down, parted on the side. The coifs are useful visual shorthand, but Weisz also does a masterful job shifting between the two, from a softer and kinder look in Beverly’s eyes to the hard, manic glee in Elliot’s. Beverly has a good bedside manner, while Elliot likes to noodle in the lab with jokey dude researcher Tom (Michael Chernus), seeing how long she can gestate an embryo outside a womb.

After a long day of traumatic births and managing terrified mothers, apathetic surrogates, and clueless partners, Elliot gives Bev an injection (hormones?), snorts a line of crushed oxy, and hits the nightclub for quick bathroom intercourse. Sex, drugs, and transvaginal probes: all within the first 10 minutes of episode one.

Created by Alice Birch (Normal People) running an all-women writers’ room, Dead Ringers is chic, potty-mouthed, and unafraid to wallow in bodily fluids. There will be afterbirth. Babies are yanked out of dilated vaginas, bulging bellies sliced open, white operating-room sneakers soaked in blood. Early on, after a pee, Beverly reaches into the toilet and fishes out an embryo that dropped from her, a bloody string of gelatinous DNA quivering in the palm of her hand. She strokes it with a finger and murmurs, “Hello.”

The spine of the season is built around Beverly’s quest to have it all: a baby, true love, and a revolutionary birthing clinic in the sisters’ name. The latter institution is funded by Rebecca and Susan Parker (Jennifer Ehle, Emily Meade), a super-wealthy couple interested in pushing the limits of science and bespoke reproductive services. For profit, naturally. Ehle is wicked fun, gazing through giant hexagonal eyeglasses, a reptilian alpha lesbian who salts her barbs with copious f-bombs. “You don’t tell me fuck off then fuck off yourself, sit the fuck back down,” she purrs at a bumpy business dinner. The line may look overdone, but Ehle delivers it with cool indignation. “Is capitalism very bad?” Elliot taunts Beverly, who is reluctant to jump into bed with a family clearly modeled after the Sacklers and responsible for a nationwide opioid crisis.

Beverly is the sympathetic, relatable one at first. But Elliot is a lark, sowing chaos with her cynicism and lust for sensation. Hoovering up yet more cocaine, she raves about the future of their field. “You want to stop menopause, you want men to lactate, you want female sperm? You want me to grow you a baby out of nothing? You want me to tighten your vagina whilst I pull a baby out of your belly button? Fine. Bring it on, let’s do the research!”

As for Beverly’s love life, that comes in the form of Genevieve (Britne Oldford), the beautiful star of a TV show who comes to the Mantles to have her fallopian status checked. The deeper in love Beverly falls with a wary Genevieve, the more alarmed and out of control Elliot grows. “It’s not fair to keep her all to yourself,” complains Elliot, chowing down on a sandwich. “You haven’t had her unless I’ve had her.” This symbiotic bond between the twins is both their superpower and their kryptonite.

Not all the side plots are as engaging or narratively satisfying as the agonized struggle between the sisters. Poppy Liu lurks on the periphery as Greta, the Mantles’ domestic assistant and factotum: cooking, cleaning, but also engaging in an obscure witchy side hustle. When the sisters are away courting Parker money, Greta collects a used tampon from the trash and pubic hair from panties in the hamper. By the end, though, Greta’s secret agenda turns out to be surprisingly tame and tangential to the main story. Another episode’s flashbacks to the Mantle sisters’ childhood sheds little light on their dysfunctional relationship, except to note they had a highly ambivalent mother.

Dead Ringers – Official Trailer | Prime Video

Directed with exacting Kubrickian cool by Sean Durkin, Karyn Kusama, and others, the visual compositions abound in mirrors, reflections, and symmetrical framing of bodies and architecture. The dominant and obsessive palette is red. Cinematographer Jody Lee Lipes (on the first two episodes) includes washes and panels of red in a high proportion of shots, from pulsing hot lights in a nightclub to rectangular scarlet light panels in the sisters’ kitchen. Once you notice red-and-mirror vocabulary, it’s everywhere. The Mantle Birthing Center looks like the Guggenheim Museum decked out as the space station lobby from 2001: A Space Odyssey.

For all the lush production values, smart, cutting dialogue, and Weisz’s monstrously fine performance, Dead Ringers still feels a bit much. Do we need six episodes? Must they be a solid hour each? Weisz works herself to the bone and uses every tool in her kit, but there’s just so much manic, destructive Elliot and anguished, weepy Beverly one can take. Each episode could drop ten minutes—especially with subplots and supporting characters this sketchy.

Still, there’s enough craft and tension to hang on for the gruesome finale of this limited series. Will Beverly free herself from her evil twin? Will she carry the baby to term? Was Elliot the victim all along? Cronenberg’s movie ended, unforgettably, with one twin vivisecting the other before dying of a drug overdose. Birch and Weisz find a different path out of the Mantle maze, but it certainly isn’t family viewing.


Dead Ringers premieres April 21 on Prime Video.

12 Comments

  • presidentzod-av says:

    The movie was pretty nihilistic. This looks to be more of the same. Meh.

  • reformedagoutigerbil-av says:

    It was a busy Friday night at the local gastro pub, and the tables were filled with patrons eager to indulge in the restaurant’s renowned menu. Among the throngs of diners, there was one particular guest who stood out – a portly man by the name of Harold.Harold was excited to be at the restaurant and eagerly scanned the menu, eagerly anticipating his meal. However, as he looked at the list of dishes, he couldn’t help but feel a little confused. The names of the dishes sounded a little… unusual.“Excuse me, waiter,” Harold called out, trying to get the attention of one of the servers. “What’s the ‘type 1′ dish?”The waiter, who was used to dealing with all sorts of strange requests, simply smiled and explained that there was no ‘type 1′ dish on the menu.“Oh, I’m sorry,” Harold said, feeling embarrassed. “I must have been mistaken. What about ‘type 2′? Is that a soup or a salad?”The waiter, trying not to laugh, patiently explained that the numbers on the menu did not correspond to dishes, but rather to the Bristol Stool Chart – a medical chart used to classify different types of feces.Harold turned beet red with embarrassment. He had been studying the Bristol Stool Chart earlier that day for his medical exam and had somehow mixed up the chart with the restaurant menu.The waiter couldn’t help but chuckle as Harold apologized profusely for his mistake. “It’s alright, sir,” the waiter said with a grin. “I’m sure we can find you something on the menu that’s a little more appetizing than type 4.”Harold breathed a sigh of relief, grateful that his blunder had been met with humor and understanding. He decided to order a steak instead, still a little unsure if it would come in the form of a type 5 or 6.As Harold enjoyed his meal, he couldn’t help but laugh at his own mistake. It was a silly mix-up, but one that he would remember for a long time to come. From that day forward, he made sure to keep his medical charts and restaurant menus separate – a lesson learned the hard (and hilarious) way.

  • mchapman-av says:

    The showrunner’s name is Alice Birth? A little on the nose, don’t you think?

  • stevennorwood-av says:

    Well this sounds rough. I love Michael Chernus, but I think he deserves better than roles that can be described as “jokey dude researcher”. 

    • kencerveny-av says:

      Change the word “researcher” to “physicist” and it pretty much describes his role in the series Manhattan.

  • interlinked-av says:

    Rachels Weiz.I’ll go play with my ball now.

  • dikeithfowler-av says:

    Back in 1995 I saw a production of Design For Living in London that Weisz was in when she was 24, and it’s freaking me out enormously that she only appears to have aged by about five years since then.

  • aleatoire-av says:

    Won’t bother to hire twin actresses so now we’re stuck with obviously one twin will always wear her hair long and the other in a bun, and also one is evil so she wears dark. Zzzz

    • mf50-av says:

      Unless they switch places to seduce someone. I’m confused. Orphan Black somehow managed to telegraph the various identities. Of course, that show didn’t play the “I’ll be you” card so heavily.

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