“In a world of privilege, the truth is the ultimate threat.”
Entitled (2025) dives into the ruthless world of wealth, secrets, and manipulation, delivering a razor-sharp thriller that exposes the moral rot beneath a life of privilege. Directed by Emerald Fennell (Promising Young Woman), the film is a biting commentary on power, ambition, and the cost of maintaining appearances.
At the center is Victoria Langford (Florence Pugh), the brilliant but disillusioned daughter of a billionaire tech mogul. Raised amidst opulence, Victoria has always resented the entitlement of her wealthy circles. But when her father dies suddenly under mysterious circumstances, she inherits not just a fortune, but a web of deadly secrets tied to a conspiracy with global stakes.
Determined to uncover the truth, Victoria clashes with ruthless corporate board members, cunning political players, and an enigmatic private investigator (played by Daniel Kaluuya) who may have his own hidden agenda. As she digs deeper, Victoria finds herself torn between preserving her family’s empire—or burning it all to the ground.
Entitled pulses with slick visuals, tense dialogue, and a simmering sense of danger. Fennell crafts a world of luxurious mansions, neon-lit boardrooms, and exclusive parties hiding sinister deals. Florence Pugh shines in a role that demands both icy resolve and raw vulnerability.
Far from just a tale of the rich behaving badly, Entitled challenges viewers to question who truly pays the price for privilege — and whether anyone can remain innocent in a world built on secrets and lies.