post_page_cover

Patricia Clarkson’s Strong Performance Cannot Save This Lackluster, Unskilled Courtroom Drama Biopic

May 10, 2025

It is hard to make a great biopic, and Lilly was a reminder of that. Sometimes, the performance by one or two strong leads can really ground the film, as was the case with 2023’s mixed-reviewed sports drama Nyad. Even if these movies otherwise fall into conventional, overwrought biopic storylines, a stellar performance can elevate the movie. Lilly similarly centers itself around one bigger-name actor — Patricia Clarkson. Clarkson is surrounded by a lesser-known supporting cast that includes Josh McDermitt, Thomas Sadoski, Deirdre Lovejoy, John Benjamin Hickey, and Joshua Mikel.
The Rachel Feldman-directed film chronicles the life of Lilly Ledbetter, a fair pay activist. Splicing together footage of Clarkson with real-life footage of former President Joe Biden and other known political figures, Lilly makes it clear from the get-go that this movie prides itself on its based-on-a-true-story origin. Ledbetter herself did not start in politics, but as a Goodyear tire factory worker who spent years trying to work her way up, only to face unfair pay barriers.
Lilly tells an undeniably important story, and it is coming out at an emotional time. After years of fighting through the legal system and becoming an example for her community, Ledbetter passed away last year at the age of 86. While the film attempts to be a tribute to Ledbetter and the legislation she later inspired, it meets some significant stumbling blocks along the way.
Even With A Compelling Lead, Lilly Doesn’t Do Justice To Its Important Story

The Supporting Cast Is Very Weak Compared To Clarkson

An Oscar nominee and three-time Emmy winner, Clarkson knows what she is doing onscreen. In a stronger movie, she could have been a great lead for Lilly. She is both poised and forceful, embodying the Alabama activist’s struggle through and through. While this was a compelling element of the film, Clarkson’s strong work was severely undermined by the lackluster ensemble.

For its duration, the movie cuts between its narrative and real-life interview footage of late Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg, whose clips often speak directly to the themes.

Most noticeably, the film’s foray into the more broadly cinematic and perhaps less realistic portrayals of its antagonists acted to its detriment. I cannot deny that the real-life story includes ridiculously overt sexism, and the court cases make that clear. What I can say, however, is that the way most of the factory-working men border on being comic book villains to melodramatic proportions. It is fair for their sexism to be portrayed as extreme, but the ensemble cast’s caricatured villainy often took me out of the moment.
This is a shame, because this overdramatized approach over-Hollywoodizes what could have been a meaningful film. Clarkson herself is fairly grounded in the film. But even those around her, whether it be her onscreen husband or fellow workers, seem to only play the emotional extremes, undermining the dynamic range of the lead performance.
Lilly Lacks Any Subtlety In Its Storytelling

Its Dialogue Is Particularly Inarticulate

The performances are just a symptom of the bigger problem with Lilly: the film lacks any and all subtlety. In the first few minutes of the movie, I wondered if my brightness settings were off on my device. But I soon discovered that the undersaturated grayscale was, in fact, an intentional effect in the film. When the protagonist eventually secures legal representation, color literally (and abruptly) enters her life and, to represent this, the screen.

Related

10 Best Biopics About Influential Women

The best biopics about women reflect the true life stories of figures whose resilience and hard-fought success still inspire people decades later.

I found this filmmaking approach overly obvious, simplifying her life story. After all, Lilly had plenty of challenging, less “colorful” moments later on in her life, so why shift so abruptly that early in the movie? Unfortunately, it was not the only time that Feldman and her editors picked the bluntest approach possible. For its duration, the movie cuts between its narrative and real-life interview footage of late Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg, whose clips often speak directly to the themes.
Unfortunately, Lilly’s non-RBG dialogue is still painfully obvious. In one particularly egregious line, Ledbetter says “it was hard working in that place. Hard being a woman.” While lines like this are certainly prevalent to the movie’s main ideas, they are too often theme statements that seem more like a vehicle to deliver the main message than authentic human dialogue. In the end, as much as Lilly might wish to be the Erin Brockovich for women in the factory industry, it misses the mark.

Lilly

3/10

Release Date

May 9, 2025

Runtime

93 minutes

Director

Rachel Feldman

Writers

Adam Prince, Rachel Feldman

Producers

Allyn Stewart, J. Todd Harris, Simone Pero, Kelly E. Ashton, Kerianne Flynn, Christine Schwarzman

Patricia Clarkson

Lilly Ledbetter

John Benjamin Hickey

Charles Ledbetter

Pros & Cons

Lilly tells an important story

The ensemble cast undermines a good performance from Clarkson
Lilly lacks subtlety
The dialogue sound unrealistic and too often says the messages out loud

Disclaimer: This story is auto-aggregated by a computer program and has not been created or edited by filmibee.
Publisher: Source link

YOU MIGHT ALSO LIKE
‘Off Campus’ Teaser and Release Date Revealed by Prime Video
‘Off Campus’ Teaser and Release Date Revealed by Prime Video

No one expected a love story between rival hockey players to become one of the most talked-about TV shows of 2025, but there's a lot more where Heated Rivalry came from, as a new teaser for Prime Video's foray into…

Mar 21, 2026

...
Sarah Michelle Gellar Urges ‘Buffy’ Fans to Avoid Reading Leaked Reboot Scripts

Buffy the Vampire Slayer fans have had a rough few days after Hulu officially pulled the plug on a revival of the series, which would have brought star Sarah Michelle Gellar back as the titular heroine. Described as a continuation…

Mar 20, 2026

Born Again’ Stars Explain Why Bullseye Is So Dangerous in Season 2 [Exclusive]
Born Again’ Stars Explain Why Bullseye Is So Dangerous in Season 2 [Exclusive]

Along with Charlie Cox's Matt Murdock and Vincent D'Ofnorio's Wilson Fisk, Daredevil: Born Again Season 1 brought back one of The Man Without Fear's most notorious villains: Wilson Bethel's Benjamin Poindexter, better known as Bullseye. Not only was he back…

Mar 19, 2026

...
Born Again’ Showrunner Confirms ‘Avengers’ Character Is Key to Street Level MCU [Exclusive]

Ahead of the Avengers' return to the big screen later this year, Marvel Studios will return to street-level storytelling with the second season of Daredevil: Born Again on Disney+. Along with making the show canon to everything that happened in…

Mar 18, 2026