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Why Yorgos Lanthimos Shot VistaVision in Basement Set Film
TV & Streaming

Why Yorgos Lanthimos Shot VistaVision in Basement Set Film

by jummy84 November 1, 2025
written by jummy84

In “Bugonia,” after Teddy (Jesse Plemons) kidnaps Michelle (Emma Stone), a large percentage of the movie takes place inside the conspiracy-obsessed kidnapper’s house. Specifically, his basement, where he goes to extreme lengths to get what he wants from the powerful, cunning CEO he’s holding captive.

While a guest on this week’s episode of the Filmmaker Toolkit podcast, director Yorgos Lanthimos discussed why the limitations of the basement setting were cinematically necessary.

“Films build microcosms, and those can be of varying sizes, and this is one of the smaller ones. That creates a lot of tension and allows you to scrutinize the situation,” said Lanthimos. “It’s like looking through a microscope a little bit, if you limit things, if you go further and deeper and closer, [you ask as a viewer], ‘What is there?’ And especially if there’s an explosive dynamic, you’re so close, it’s amplified.”

'The Love That Remains' ('Ástin Sem Eftir Er')

Working within restricted space, Lanthimos felt the need to go big with the filmmaking, both with supervising sound editor/re-recording mixer Johnnie Burn’s sound design and composer Jerskin Fendrix’s music, which is by far the biggest score in the score-adverse director’s career.

“I just felt that the juxtaposition of a really big soundtrack would be interesting,” said Lanthimos. “There’s a lot of big themes and a lot of big feelings, so I wanted that to be represented in an extreme way in the soundtrack and music and sound design. It’s a similar reason that we ended up shooting the film on VistaVision.”

That’s right, “One Battle After Another” and “The Brutalist” aren’t the only two recent films that breathed life back into the once-dead large-format and barely functioning VistaVision cameras that had spent decades on the shelf. But unlike Lathimos, Paul Thomas Anderson and Brady Corbet reached for the VistaVision to lend a big-screen grandeur to what were the directors’ most expansive and epic films to date.

While on the podcast, Lanthimos recognized how counterintuitive it was shooting his smallest (spatial speaking) film on the largest possible negative, but said that after using VistaVision to shoot the reanimation scene in “Poor Things,” the director and his cinematographer Robbie Ryan knew the format would be perfect to frame his “Bugonia” characters. “It was all about these characters, it was all about this very intense environment, photographing them in a large format, making their portraits bigger than life in a way, just added this necessary layer to express all these big ideas and feelings.”

Aesthetically, Lanthimos preferred the VistaVision over the more well-established and less cumbersome 65mm film cameras — the images weren’t as wide (he wanted “boxier”), and the tonality, depth, and richness of the image appealed to his and Ryan’s sensibilities.

“After ‘Poor Things,’ we kept thinking about the images, and Robbie [kept] asking around about the VistaVision cameras,” said Lanthimos.

On “Poor Things,” they had only been able to use VistaVision on the non-dialogue reanimation scene because the old cameras were too loud to record sync sound. Afterwards, the persistent Ryan eventually tracked down a quieter Wilcam 11 VistaVision camera.

“We discovered this one camera that exists in the world, that’s functioning, which is quieter than those cameras, but it’s huge, and temperamental, and very difficult to load, and it takes a lot of time,” said Lanthimos.

BUGONIA, from left: director Yorgos Lanthimos, cinematographer Robbie Ryan, Emma Stone, on set, 2025. ph: Atsushi Nishijima / ©Focus Features / Courtesy Everett Collection
Yorgos Lanthimos, cinematographer Robbie Ryan, Emma Stone, and the Wilcam 11 on the ‘Bugonia’ set©Focus Features/Courtesy Everett Collection

The descriptor of the Wilcam 11 as “functioning” is up for debate, as it created constant problems on the “Bugonia” set. “One Battle After Another” cinematographer Michael Bauman told IndieWire the quieter WilCam 11 was so cumbersome and temperamental (completely failing during some camera tests according to camera operator Colin Anderson), PTA deemed it “unreliable” during the testing phase. On “One Battle” they went with the louder VistaVision camera, switching to Super 35mm for interior shots where the camera was in very close proximity to the actors delivering dialogue, and testing ways to eliminate “the extremely” loud camera noise in post-production when the camera was at a certain distance or outdoors.

Lanthimos expressed “surprise” that the dialogue-heavy “One Battle” got away with the noisier camera, before acknowledging how unique his film’s needs were. “I guess we had a lot of scenes in a basement, a very enclosed space — the sound of a camera that loud was really problematic for us. We couldn’t get the camera many feet away, in order to try and dump down the sound a little bit. And so for us, there wasn’t any other solution. And in the end, it kind of became an advantage. We embraced it, we went with it, and it just became a restriction in a way that makes you more creative.”

To hear Yorgos Lanthimos’s full interview, subscribe to the Filmmaker Toolkit podcast on Apple, Spotify, or your favorite podcast platform.

November 1, 2025 0 comments
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Jesse Plemons' Role in 'Bugonia' Is the Talk of Telluride
TV & Streaming

Emma Stone Is an Evil CEO for Yorgos Lanthimos

by jummy84 October 24, 2025
written by jummy84

Editor’s Note: This review was originally published during the 2025 Venice Film Festival. Focus Features releases “Bugonia” in select theaters on Friday, October 24 before a wide release October 31.

Imagine if Michael Haneke’s “Funny Games” were instead about a pair of lone-wolf, conservationist vigilantes trying to save the world instead of two sociopathic twinks wanting to tear it down, and you’ll have some idea of the hyper-contained, rigorously controlled torture chamber that is Yorgos Lanthimos’ “Bugonia.”

Jesse Plemons stars as a galaxy-brained conspiracist beekeeper who’s either severely mentally ill or the only prophet among us, hijacking his cousin (Aidan Delbis) into a scheme to kidnap a big pharma executive (Emma Stone) whom he believes to be a body-snatched alien sent to end the planet.

Andrea Gibson and Megan Falley appear in Come See Me in the Good Light by Ryan White, an official selection of the 2025 Sundance Film Festival. Courtesy of Sundance Institute | photo by Brandon Somerhalder.

Lanthimos works from an on-the-nose-for-the-now feature screenplay by “Succession” and “The Menu” writer Will Tracy, diverting from the droll theater of cruelty present in scripts by Efthimis Filippou (“Kinds of Kindness”) or the florid repartee of Tony McNamara (“The Favourite,” “Poor Things”). “Bugonia” has all the streak of Tracy’s kill-the-rich brand of satire, but with the Greek Oscar-nominated filmmaker interrogating the potential performativity of such capitalist-fighting crusades.

That’s because Lanthimos brings to this film his signature stamp of perverse detachment, though without the fish-eyed lenses this harrowing time around depravity’s merry-go-round. Recall that the most unexpectedly mainstream-friendly film of his career, “Poor Things,” revealed a tender, even hopeful side to the “Killing of a Sacred Deer” and “Dogtooth” director known for his clinical stance on humankind’s worthiness; “Kinds of Kindness,” though, snapped us back into his grim worldview with a trio of nihilistic tales about mental manipulation.

“Bugonia” falls somewhere between that film, “The Killing of a Sacred Deer,” and “The Lobster” in terms of both its double-sided callousness toward and guarded optimism about our willingness or ability to reverse course.

It’s both a funny, fucked-up trifle — one that hurtles toward a hilariously unsubtle, “Burn After Reading”-esque note of we-learned-nothing existential futility — and an earnest message movie for our disintegrating present, a warning that we are probably too late to effect any real change on the world we so vaingloriously messed up. Accusations of Lanthimos veering toward the twee of late (or always) apply less to “Bugonia,” which has no shortage of onscreen entrails or a torture scene set to, of all songs, Green Day’s “Basket Case.”

Lanthimos’ tenth feature would have been more consistently engaging, a real home run, as a 90-minute movie as opposed to two hours that encroach on a tedious overplaying of their themes. But would it then seem important enough? “Bugonia” is either profound or profoundly silly. It’s also both.

This time, Lanthimos takes a stab at a remake, faithfully re-mounting, save for a few significant changes, Jang Joon-hwan’s 2003 Korean sci-fi movie “Save the Green Planet!” Ultimately, this film’s absurd existentialist deadpan aligns Lanthimos’ work here closer to Ruben Östlund than ever — himself a filmmaker likely drawing from Lanthimos these days — to mine the comedy of repetitious futility to disorienting effect.

Social burnout Teddy lives in the kind of paranoiac’s hovel where the windows are papered over by tinfoil, and where you can all but feel the bugs crawling over you, while not working as a factory lackey for biomedical company Auxolith in middle-of-depressing-nowhere U.S.A. He maintains multiple beehives in his backyard, obsessing over the colony collapse disorder that threatens not just his bees, but all of them everywhere. Is his property the control room of a hoped-for utopia, or an unkempt truther’s hell-hole bunker? You decide.

At the top of the Auxolith’s pyramid is decorated CEO Michelle Fuller. She keeps a picture with Michelle Obama in her office, but bristles at the language of DEI training while knowing well enough to put on a placid, phony smile and encourage her employees to, sure, head home by 5:30 p.m. — one of many requisite gestures of pity toward her underlings that, dear God no, should not be understood by them as compulsory. One of those “we care about our employees” little treats of false gratitude that always comes with an asterisk, a footnote, and then that other footnote.

Anyone who’s been a cog in the corporate world can resonate with the hollow ring of Michelle’s posturing, as if a gun was put to her head by a committee demanding she do better. In the boardroom, she’s all for socially conscious messaging around her company’s questionable medical advancements, but off the clock, when she’s not popping mystery pills and singing to Chappell Roan in her shiny SUV, she has no trouble sleeping at night despite her company having destroyed lives with a vanguard opioid-withdrawal medication that backfired.

Emma Stone stars as Michelle in director Yorgos Lanthimos' BUGONIA, a Focus Features release.
Credit: Atsushi Nishijima/Focus Features © 2025 All Rights Reserved.
Emma Stone in ‘Bugonia’Atsushi Nishijima/Focus Features. © 2025 All Rights Reserved.

Teddy is one such casualty of Auxolith’s pioneering biotechnology, with his mother (Alicia Silverstone) now in a coma bed with tubes attached after a drug trial gone wrong. So it makes sense that the chosen target of his master plan is Michelle herself. Jacked up on steroids, Teddy and his dutiful, clearly exploited cousin Don stage a home invasion, drugging and kidnapping Michelle to drag her back to Teddy’s disheveled outpost. Lanthimos and cinematographer Robbie Ryan stage and shoot said home invasion like a Jacques Tati sequence — that is to say, from an amused, ironic distance that watches humans squirm and scramble without intervention. Though, of course, Lanthimos not intervening or getting too close to the action is its own sort of intervention, doing by not doing.

But “Bugonia” will eventually rub your face much closer into viscera and shrapnel and other bodily horrors. Emma Stone actually shaved her head for the movie, appearing to do so on camera with commendable, unfazed dedication to the task, as Teddy and Don hold Michelle hostage, and she starts to play along with the idea that, yeah, sure, she might be an extraterrestrial sent to our Earth to wreak havoc. Anything to get her out of those damned chains, and convince Teddy to loosen his tightening grasp, hell-bent on Michelle withdrawing her supposed species from Earth before the next lunar eclipse. Is Teddy insane, or actually onto something? The film is clever in how it constantly shifts our allegiances, and its own.

“Bugonia” is fascinating in contrast to a film like “Kinds of Kindness,” which Lanthimos shot almost as a lark, a slice of escapism from the large-scale demands of “Poor Things,” with a minimalist crew and set. His latest film is even more scaled-down — until it isn’t — than “Kinds of Kindness,” serving almost as a stagelike chamber drama wrought on Super 35 and VistaVision. The canvas may be small, but Lanthimos colors inside the lines with grandeur, treating the deceptively walled-up material with the application of a bigger-budget studio project.

Stone is predictably great, but her Michelle Fuller is closer to her spiraling flip-anthropist in TV’s “The Curse” than the can’t-take-her-down feminist Bella Baxter of “Poor Things.” Lanthimos’ skepticism of humankind’s capacity to evolve is a welcome comfort, as always, in our politically miserable era, but it feels familiar. Some hot-button jokes land better than others, though “Bugonia” is always questioning the ideology on either side. Teddy confesses to having tried alt-right, “alt-lite,” Marxism, you name it, with no costume quite fitting his mentally collapsing outlook. There’s a great line in which Teddy calls college education a “credentialist scam for laundering privilege,” and it’s spoken so convincingly that it makes you wonder, well, isn’t it?

A superb and unvarnished Plemons, who played a cherub-faced corporate drone in one of three roles in “Kinds of Kindness,” slims down and goes gaunter and more manic, physically and emotionally, than ever to play a borderline-psychopathic conspiracy head with sadistic tendencies. And don’t count out Stavros Halkias in a Paul Walter Hauser-type performance as Teddy’s childhood babysitter who’s now the town cop. When cops show up at the door for a wellness check at an ongoing, in-the-basement hostage situation at any house in the movies, well, we know how that story ends.

The timely urgency of “Bugonia” could be identified from outer space unless you’ve been living under a celestial object these days, as rogue vigilantes taking down corporate bigwigs have, in a post-2020 world, turned into the folk heroes dominating headlines and activating internet warriors. That’s not to say “Bugonia” carries an empowering message: If anything, it’s distrusting in humanity’s ability to rise above our own failures, arguing that while it’s not too late to turn things around, we probably won’t anyway.

Grade: B

“Bugonia” premiered at the 2025 Venice Film Festival. Focus Features will release the film in select theaters on Friday, October 24 and widely on Friday, October 31. 

Want to stay up to date on IndieWire’s film reviews and critical thoughts? Subscribe here to our newly launched newsletter, In Review by David Ehrlich, in which our Chief Film Critic and Head Reviews Editor rounds up the best new reviews and streaming picks along with some exclusive musings — all only available to subscribers.

October 24, 2025 0 comments
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Emma Stone's Bugonia Trailer Is Out: Can She Outsmart Her Alien Captors? Watch To Find Out! | Glamsham.com
Lifestyle

Bugonia (2025): Yorgos Lanthimos And Emma Stone Reunite For A Genre-Bending Sci-Fi Thriller | Glamsham.com

by jummy84 October 7, 2025
written by jummy84

Focus Features’ Bugonia arrives in theaters on October 31, 2025, bringing together an extraordinary creative team led by director Yorgos Lanthimos (Poor Things, The Favourite) and Academy Award® winner Emma Stone. The film also stars Jesse Plemons, Aidan Delbis, Stavros Halkias, and Alicia Silverstone, in a screenplay penned by Will Tracy (The Menu).

According to the official production notes, Bugonia follows two conspiracy-obsessed young men who kidnap a powerful corporate CEO, convinced she is an alien plotting humanity’s destruction. What begins as an unhinged act of paranoia evolves into a darkly comedic, unsettling examination of control, fear, and belief in a world where truth feels increasingly elusive.

Produced by Ed Guiney, Andrew Lowe, Yorgos Lanthimos, Emma Stone, Ari Aster, Lars Knudsen, Miky Lee, and Jerry Kyoungboum Ko, Bugonia unites some of contemporary cinema’s boldest storytellers. Lanthimos’ trademark surrealism and Tracy’s razor-sharp writing promise a film that defies conventional boundaries, blending tension with absurdist humor and speculative mystery.

While plot specifics remain closely guarded, Bugonia continues Lanthimos’ exploration of human behavior through extreme scenarios. The collaboration with Focus Features signals another ambitious theatrical release designed for audiences seeking smart, unconventional storytelling.

October 7, 2025 0 comments
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Watch: Yorgos Lanthimos' Prada Short Film with Scarlett Johansson
Hollywood

Watch: Yorgos Lanthimos’ Prada Short Film with Scarlett Johansson

by jummy84 September 16, 2025
written by jummy84

Watch: Yorgos Lanthimos’ Prada Short Film with Scarlett Johansson

by Alex Billington
September 16, 2025
Source: YouTube

“Okay, the following is needed: Morning Breeze… Whisper of all your dead loved ones’ names… Rainwater that drips from a non-blooming cherry tree…” Such special ingredients… Another wacky, fun new film from Yorgos Lanthimos to enjoy this year. Alas this is only a 2-min short film (though I recommend watching Bugonia when it opens this fall). Prada has unveiled their newest promo – a short film directed by Yorgos Lanthimos and starring Scarlett Johansson made to promote the “Prada Galleria bag.” Which sells for the ridiculous price of around $1000-$5000 – which is exactly how they can afford to hire such a talented filmmaker / actress duo to make this commercial. Of course it’s just an ad, but it’s still fun to see Lanthimos putting in some of his usual strange touches. And with Scarlett, well, I can imagine this will be an effective campaign. The handbag is named after the brand’s historic flagship boutique, opened by Mario Prada in the Galleria Vittorio Emanuele II in Milan in 1913. Just what’s in that shiny sphere? And can we order one, too?

Yorgos Lanthimos' Prada Short Film

Yorgos Lanthimos' Prada Short Film

Thanks to Twitter for the tip on this debuting online. Original intro via YouTube: “Discover the new Prada campaign directed by Yorgos Lanthimos and starring Prada Ambassador Scarlett Johansson. A cinematic study of transformation & persona, where ritual identities take place. A totem of change, the Prada Galleria handbag is reimagined season after season. In this film, it’s central to a story of perpetual transformation – of the self, of identity, of Prada itself.” This “Prada Galleria bag” promotional short film is directed by Greek filmmaker Yorgos Lanthimos, director of the films My Best Friend, Kinetta, Dogtooth, Alps, The Lobster, The Killing of a Sacred Deer, The Favourite, Poor Things, Kinds of Kindness, as well as this year’s new film Bugonia, plus many other shorts & music videos. With creative direction by Miuccia Prada and Raf Simons for Prada. The marketing campaign creative director is Ferdinando Verderi. For more on this short, head to YouTube or visit Prada’s website. To discover more short films (+ music videos), click here. How was that?

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September 16, 2025 0 comments
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Venice 2025: Yorgos Lanthimos' 'Bugonia' is Another Clever Mindfck
Hollywood

Venice 2025: Yorgos Lanthimos’ ‘Bugonia’ is Another Clever Mindfck

by jummy84 August 31, 2025
written by jummy84

Venice 2025: Yorgos Lanthimos’ ‘Bugonia’ is Another Clever Mindfck

by Alex Billington
August 29, 2025

The always provocative mad genius Yorgos Lanthimos is back again with another movie to mess with our minds! But this one is much more important than his more playful creations. Bugonia is Lanthimos 10th feature film so far – and one of his best yet. It’s not as weird or confusing as Dogtooth, and it’s not as bizarre or wacky as Poor Things, nor is it as playful or witty as The Favourite. It’s actually one of Lanthimos’ most direct and accessible films – mainly because the premise is specific, following one path towards an ultimate reveal. Bugonia is Yorgos’ clever remake of a Korean movie titled Save the Green Planet! (from 2003). His take on this story is quite similar, following the original script closely with a few changes & tweaks that fit Yorgos’ sentiments. Above all else, I think it’s a remarkably fun and fresh new version of this story, with an improved finale and better performances from the cast as they all get lost in the madness of the situation.

Similar to Dogtooth but unlike in Poor Things, Bugonia takes place mostly in confined spaces and simple locations – primarily at the house of this man named Teddy. Jesse Plemons stars as Teddy, a beekeeper who decides that he must kidnap the CEO of a powerful pharmaceutical company. His cousin Don, played by Aidan Delbis, is recruited into his conspiracy plot and off they go to grab her. Emma Stone co-stars as Michelle, the power woman girlboss CEO who is picked up by these two guys. They believe she is an alien from Andromeda controlling Earth and all the people. Teddy is smart enough to get her into his basement and lock her up there, keeping the investigation away as he tries to get her to admit the truth and prepare a message so they leave Earth alone. Of course it gets kooky, and as time goes on, Teddy and Don start to lose control of the situation, and Michelle starts to figure out what the best escape plan is. But the question still remains: is she an alien? Or are these guys just super crazy? The film sticks to this premise, same as the one from Save the Green Planet!, and for most of the runtime we don’t get many answers to the many questions.

Minor spoilers from here on. Without giving away everything, Bugonia is going to be a challenging film for many people to grasp and not get upset watching. Mainly because for most of the movie you’re watching too crazy conspiracy nuts doing crazy things to a woman in hopes they’ll get her to reveal the truth so they can be the ones to save the planet. Supposedly. It requires a big ask of the audience to have different feelings by the end and to go back and make sense of and – most importantly – rethink everything that came before. Many viewers will not want to do this – their visceral, emotional reaction to the kidnapping and everything that is happening is going to be the dominant emotion no matter. But this is ultimately the entire point of both Bugonia and Save the Green Planet!. Humans are so caught up in these emotions we often refuse to see the bigger picture and refuse to understand what it really take to save the entire planet and to give all humans a better life. The question of how to solve climate change is complex, and this movie is clearly not attempting to answer that directly because it is just a sci-fi fantasy story, but it is also a reminder that we’re just not capable of realizing that this planet is being destroyed by extremely dumb humans. And so it goes…

The thing about Bugonia is that it’s just a movie – this is not happening for real and we shouldn’t interpret it in that way. And good movies are supposed to make you think, they’re supposed to stir up emotions & make you wonder. One of the issues with this Lanthimos movie is that it gets a bit slow in the middle, dragging out the “what the heck is happening” middle section of this kidnapping, because it’s set at this home & these two guys are such goofballs you’re just waiting for it all to unravel. It’s easy to misinterpret and get upset at this movie, and many early reactions I’ve seen so far have already indicated this is happening. Among many intriguing ideas it brings up, I really do think Bugonia is commenting on the kind of people who have a “but this adds nothing new” attitude and who are more obsessed with getting upset at who or how something important is being said than WHAT is really happening to our planet because we’re destroying it. And that is reiterated within the last 15 minutes of the film, along with Lanthimos’ song choice right at the end. “When will they ever learn?” Probably never, sadly. And while I don’t expect this movie to change anyone’s minds, I am glad Lanthimos has retold this story in order to reiterate the very bold statement this script is making.

As for the technical aspects, of course Lanthimos is a master filmmaker and is always capable of presenting a film that is gorgeous to look at and listen to – with another unique score by Jerskin Fendrix. Featuring some vivid, wide angle cinematography by his regular DP Robbie Ryan, which works sometimes, though it doesn’t feel as expansive or as majestic as Poor Things or The Favourite. Bugonia is less of a movie that is meant to be entertaining, considering we’re watching a kidnapping for nearly two hours, as it is meant to be deeply thought-provoking and prickly. I seriously hope audiences are willing to engage with it on that level, to interpret it correctly. And let the final message land with the veracity it’s designed to so that maybe, just maybe, we can all figure out what is really required to save this beautiful Earth before we destroy it for good.

Alex’s Venice 2025 Rating: 8.5 out of 10
Follow Alex on Twitter – @firstshowing / Or Letterboxd – @firstshowing

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August 31, 2025 0 comments
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Emma Stone's Channels Katharine Hepburn in Yorgos Lanthimos' 'Bugonia'
TV & Streaming

Emma Stone’s Channels Katharine Hepburn in Yorgos Lanthimos’ ‘Bugonia’

by jummy84 August 31, 2025
written by jummy84

With a shaved head, expert line deliveries and the assembly of another all-time memorable character, Emma Stone continues driving this golden age of cinema. She might just be our modern-day Katharine Hepburn.

Greek auteur Yorgos Lanthimos, Oscar-nominated director of “Poor Things” and “The Favourite,” has fully stepped into his Alfred Hitchcock era with “Bugonia,” which represents a bold new realm for the filmmaker. At the Telluride Film Festival, executive director Julie Huntsinger introduced Jesse Plemons as “Jesse F***ing Plemons,” and the actor lived up to the billing in every way.

After debuting at the Venice Film Festival, Lanthimos’ wildly audacious “Bugonia” unveiled itself to audiences at the Werner Herzog Theatre. The dark comedy presents the best kind of problem for distributor Focus Features for this Oscar season: how to shepherd two powerhouse contenders (the other being “Hamnet”) through the long, unpredictable marathon of awards campaigning and determine which narrative will resonate most with the Academy.

Adapted from Jang Joon-hwan’s 2003 South Korean cult classic “Save the Green Planet!,” the film follows two conspiracy-obsessed men — played by Plemons and newcomer Aidan Delbis — who kidnap a high-powered CEO (Stone), convinced she’s an alien bent on destroying Earth.

Plemons, already an Oscar nominee for Jane Campion’s “The Power of the Dog” (2021), goes for broke in what may be his most audacious and riveting work yet. A best actor nomination feels not only possible but inevitable. It’s hard to pinpoint Oscar winners in history who embody this type of role, but the closest comparison seems a mixture of Anthony Hopkins (“The Silence of the Lambs”) and Geoffrey Rush (“Shine”).

Stone, a two-time Oscar winner for “La La Land” (2016) and “Poor Things” (2023), shows an almost frightening fearlessness in her craft. At 36, the actor-producer is still building what could become one of Hollywood’s most decorated careers. Like Hepburn, who won four Academy Awards over a lifetime of iconic performances, Stone seems poised to keep redefining what a leading lady can be.

Stone has already made history as one of two women nominated for acting and producing in the same year (“Poor Things”). The other was Frances McDormand for “Nomadland” (2020), who won both actress and best picture — her third and fourth Oscars. McDormand’s other two Oscars came for acting in “Fargo” (1996) and “Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri” (2017).

Stone’s résumé already reads like the arc of an entire generation. From the sharp comic timing of “Easy A” to the aching vulnerability in “The Favourite,” and from her razor-edge balancing act in “Birdman” to the surrealist bravado of “Poor Things,” Stone has never repeated herself. Each performance arrives with a sense of reinvention — not unlike Hepburn, whose leap from screwball comedies in the 1930s to searing dramas in the 1960s charted an artistic evolution rarely equaled in Hollywood.

Both women also share a restless, almost defiant streak against the industry’s rigid expectations. Hepburn was notorious for refusing to play ingénues and insisted on characters with wit, grit and a pointed refusal to apologize for their ambition. Stone, in her own era, has forged a similar path — often playing women who are messy, intelligent, sensual and deeply flawed, making them magnetic nonetheless. The throughline between the two actresses is not imitation, rather an inheritance: a lineage of artistry where authenticity triumphs over convention.

Delbis, an autistic actor who prefers that term over “neurodivergent,” is remarkable in his screen debut. His portrayal of Don, a young man torn between loyalty and the yearning for truth, is raw, honest and is the emotional backbone. His presence alongside seasoned performers like Stone and Plemons gives the film a livewire quality — the sense that something unpredictable, and therefore thrilling, could spark at any moment.

Like many of Lanthimos’ films, “Bugonia” is a full-scale awards contender, with potential across acting, directing and screenplay categories, and strong prospects in every craft category — including visual effects.

In many ways, the film achieves what Adam McKay wanted “Don’t Look Up” to be: sharp, brittle social commentary on our world. The stark difference is that screenwriter Will Tracy never feels as though he’s talking down to the audience. He’s reflecting the world, holding a mirror up to our flawed selves.

But with the blend of multiple genres, I’d suspect the film to be polarizing to a select few (think “The Substance” last year). However, I think it will perform on par with “Poor Things,” which netted 11 nominations.

For Focus Features, this presents an enviable challenge of abundance: When your films are this good, the real art becomes deciding how to tell the story to voters.

August 31, 2025 0 comments
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