资讯

Ari Aster’s Eddington, starring Pedro Pascal and Joaquin Phoenix, witnesses a slow start. Read on for the details!
Eddington is, I think, less about political axe grinding, or even point making, and more about what it feels like to have all ...
Do Pedro Pascal and Joaquin Phoenix ever feel like plastic bags, drifting through the wind, wanting to start again?
Moviegoers have grown accustomed to expecting a lack of normalcy in Aster's movies. His first three films — “Hereditary,” ...
Jacobin on MSN13 小时Opinion
Eddington: Western Noir Chaos Made Boring
Writer-director Ari Aster tends to end his narratives in careening mayhem that finally exhausts itself in an absurdist state ...
Even as Aster boldly introduces all manner of Trump-era malaise, “Eddington” is deliberately opaque.
Film Review, a movie written and directed by Ari Aster and starring Joaquin Phoenix, Pedro Pascal, Emma Stone, Austin Butler ...
While confusing and drawn-out at times, “Eddington” is certainly a movie that makes you think. In the end, the people of ...
The biggest problem in Ari Aster's small community of Eddington is sitting quietly in the townspeople's pockets.
Covid and mask mandates are still a sensitive subject for many. Is this too much, too soon?
Unsurprisingly, Eddington is already one of the most divisive films of the year. After all, what’s scarier and more ...
Somehow still, the film manages to be hilarious, heart-wrenching, shocking, infuriating, and genuinely exciting, while still feeling like an honest, microcosmic appraisal of America ...