Tag: michael-stuhlbarg

  • Movie Review: ‘After The Hunt’

    (L to R) Ayo Edebiri as Maggie and Julia Roberts as Alma in 'After the Hunt', from Amazon MGM Studios. Photo Credit: Yannis Drakoulidis. © 2025 Amazon Content Services LLC. All Rights Reserved.
    (L to R) Ayo Edebiri as Maggie and Julia Roberts as Alma in ‘After the Hunt’, from Amazon MGM Studios. Photo Credit: Yannis Drakoulidis. © 2025 Amazon Content Services LLC. All Rights Reserved.

    In limited release now and expanding October 17 is ‘After The Hunt,’ directed by Luca Guadagnino and starring Julia Roberts, Andrew Garfield, Ayo Edebiri, Michael Stuhlbarg, Chloë Sevigny, and Lío Mehiel.

    C0AZzX9S4IqB9OAprVa6y

    Related Article: George Clooney Says ‘Ocean’s 14’ Budget is ‘Approved’; to Shoot in 2026

    Initial Thoughts

    (L to R) Andrew Garfield as Hank and Julia Roberts as Alma in 'After the Hunt', from Amazon MGM Studios. Photo Credit: Courtesy of Amazon MGM Studios. © 2025 Amazon Content Services LLC. All Rights Reserved.
    (L to R) Andrew Garfield as Hank and Julia Roberts as Alma in ‘After the Hunt’, from Amazon MGM Studios. Photo Credit: Courtesy of Amazon MGM Studios. © 2025 Amazon Content Services LLC. All Rights Reserved.

    Luca Guadagnino’s ‘Challengers’ was one of our favorite movies of 2024, which makes it strange to say that ‘After The Hunt’ might end up on our list of the worst films of 2025. This muddled drama, set in the elite halls of academia at Yale, focuses on a ‘he said/she said’ situation that is ripped right out of the headlines – of 2017, when #MeToo was dominating the cultural conversation.

    But while the topic is certainly just as relevant and important now as it was a few years ago, ‘After The Hunt’ doesn’t add anything interesting to the conversation. Instead, Nora Garrett’s screenplay pushes a bunch of increasingly unlikable characters around on a chessboard of vagueness masquerading as ambiguity, while Guadagnino shoots it as if he’s not looking through the lens half the time. It’s a disappointingly sloppy effort in which even the blaring, burping score – by the usually spot-on Trent Reznor and Atticus Ross – sounds off.

    Story and Direction

    (L to R) Ayo Edebiri, director Luca Guadagnino and Julia Roberts on the set of 'After the Hunt', from Amazon MGM Studios. Photo Credit: Yannis Drakoulidis. © 2025 Amazon Content Services LLC. All Rights Reserved.
    (L to R) Ayo Edebiri, director Luca Guadagnino and Julia Roberts on the set of ‘After the Hunt’, from Amazon MGM Studios. Photo Credit: Yannis Drakoulidis. © 2025 Amazon Content Services LLC. All Rights Reserved.

    ‘After The Hunt’ kicks off with a credit sequence that immediately draws attention to itself by being done in the same font, with the same layout, that Woody Allen has used for his films for 50 years. Does Guadagnino see his film as a homage to some of Allen’s upper-class social dramas? Is he trolling Allen or Allen’s cancellation from the culture at large? It’s hard to tell.

    Either way, the film opens during a party being given by Yale assistant philosophy professor Alma Imhoff (Julia Roberts) and her psychiatrist husband Frederick (Michael Stuhlbarg) for faculty and student friends, with Alma clearly the center of attention for fellow professor Hank Gibson (Andrew Garfield) and pupil Maggie Resnick (Ayo Edebiri). After a spirited if somewhat caustic night of drinking and long-winded debate, Hank escorts Maggie home – and Maggie turns up outside Alma’s door the next day, saying that he assaulted her.

    Maggie seems shocked when Alma doesn’t quite provide the full-throated support she expected, given Alma’s ‘history’ – a point we’ll go back to over and over again until it eventually comes out – and Hank later gives Alma (who is also his former lover, to the surprise of no one watching) his side of the story: that he called out Maggie – who’s gay, Black, and lives with a trans lawyer, just to make sure all the boxes are checked — for plagiarism on a paper and this is her way of getting revenge.

    (L to R) Director Luca Guadagnino and actor Julia Roberts on the set of 'After the Hunt', from Amazon MGM Studios. Photo Credit: Yannis Drakoulidis. © 2025 Amazon Content Services LLC. All Rights Reserved.
    (L to R) Director Luca Guadagnino and actor Julia Roberts on the set of ‘After the Hunt’, from Amazon MGM Studios. Photo Credit: Yannis Drakoulidis. © 2025 Amazon Content Services LLC. All Rights Reserved.

    This places the remote, chilly, deeply private Alma squarely in the middle of a classic ‘believe women’ scenario – except it doesn’t quite seem like she does. But she’s also not squarely in Hank’s corner either. And none of them seem on the level about what really happened or how they feel about it. Alma and Hank are both competing for a tenured slot, by the way, and Alma is occasionally gripped by intense stomach pains. The relentless conniving, contriving, and jockeying on all sides only seem to prove that everyone’s a jerk, with no moral compass, and that we all basically suck at being decent human beings.

    At least that’s the impression one walks out of ‘After The Hunt’ with, which drives home its point by being one of the more irritating films to watch in recent memory. Guadagnino’s camera droops inexplicably from the actors’ faces to their hands while they’re talking, as if looking for some secret code. Some shots are done in extreme close-up, with the actor talking directly into the camera – a jarring and purposeless trick in this scenario. The whole film feels airless, grimy, and ugly – even Guadagnino’s other 2024 movie, ‘Queer,’ was better visually than this.

    Is it all supposed to mean something, or is Guadagnino just drawing attention to the fact that this is – like the stories that Alma, Maggie, and Hank all may or may not construct about themselves – a fictional narrative? We even hear the director say “Cut!” at the very end of the film, suggesting that he’s not trying to get at any real psychological, social, or emotional truth. And the movie doesn’t feel like that either.

    Cast and Performances

    (L to R) Michael Stuhlbarg and Julia Roberts stars in 'After the Hunt', from Amazon MGM Studios. Photo Credit: Yannis Drakoulidis. © 2025 Amazon Content Services LLC. All Rights Reserved.
    (L to R) Michael Stuhlbarg and Julia Roberts stars in ‘After the Hunt’, from Amazon MGM Studios. Photo Credit: Yannis Drakoulidis. © 2025 Amazon Content Services LLC. All Rights Reserved.

    Despite the disjointed script and characters they’re given to work with, Julia Roberts and Andrew Garfield do fine work here. Roberts gives a performance that is both mysterious and somehow intimate, and effectively conveys Alma’s increasing terror as her carefully woven world begins to unravel around her. Garfield is similarly nuanced, making Hank both somehow sympathetic and yet totally the kind of arrogant, brash, rock-star academic who thinks he floats above the rules.

    The movie’s secret weapon may be Michael Stuhlbarg, who exhibits patience, wariness, exasperation, and his own quirky, embittered set of values as Frederik – although he can be an intrusive boor with the best of them as well. The weakest link here is the gifted comedian Edebiri, who exhibits flashes of Maggie’s inner rage and cynicism, but who can no more carry this weighty material than she could the flat ‘Opus’ from earlier this year (the one in which John Malkovich attempted to play a rock god).

    Final Thoughts

    (L to R) Andrew Garfield as Hank and Julia Roberts as Alma in 'After the Hunt', from Amazon MGM Studios. Photo Credit: Courtesy of Amazon MGM Studios. © 2025 Amazon Content Services LLC. All Rights Reserved.
    (L to R) Andrew Garfield as Hank and Julia Roberts as Alma in ‘After the Hunt’, from Amazon MGM Studios. Photo Credit: Courtesy of Amazon MGM Studios. © 2025 Amazon Content Services LLC. All Rights Reserved.

    From time to time in ‘After The Hunt,’ Guadagnino puts a loudly ticking clock on the soundtrack as just another signifier that something dreadfully urgent and important is happening. But like everything else in the film, it’s instead merely annoying. And what exactly is happening anyway? Is the film indicting cancel culture, the #MeToo movement itself, or the insular bubble of academic life?

    It’s all too incoherent to get a straight answer, and no one seems to know (except maybe Stuhlbarg) whether to play this as serious drama or histrionic soap opera. Either way, ‘After The Hunt’ is an empty mess that tries to say too much about a lot of different topics, and ends up saying nothing at all.

    ‘After The Hunt’ receives a score of 40 out of 100.

    Julia Roberts stars as Alma in 'After the Hunt', from Amazon MGM Studios. Photo Credit: Yannis Drakoulidis. © 2025 Amazon Content Services LLC. All Rights Reserved.
    Julia Roberts stars as Alma in ‘After the Hunt’, from Amazon MGM Studios. Photo Credit: Yannis Drakoulidis. © 2025 Amazon Content Services LLC. All Rights Reserved.

    What is the plot of ‘After The Hunt’?

    A college professor is forced to grapple with her own secretive past after one of her colleagues is faced with a serious accusation.

    Who is in the cast of ‘After The Hunt’?

    Julia Roberts as Alma Imhoff
    Ayo Edebiri as Margaret “Maggie” Resnick
    Andrew Garfield as Henrik “Hank” Gibson
    Michael Stuhlbarg as Frederik Imhoff
    Chloë Sevigny as Dr. Kim Sayers
    Lío Mehiel as Alex

    (L to R) Julia Roberts as Alma, Michael Stuhlbarg as Frederik and Chloë Sevigny as Dr. Kim Sayers in 'After the Hunt', from Amazon MGM Studios. Photo Credit: Courtesy of Amazon MGM Studios. © 2025 Amazon Content Services LLC. All Rights Reserved.
    (L to R) Julia Roberts as Alma, Michael Stuhlbarg as Frederik and Chloë Sevigny as Dr. Kim Sayers in ‘After the Hunt’, from Amazon MGM Studios. Photo Credit: Courtesy of Amazon MGM Studios. © 2025 Amazon Content Services LLC. All Rights Reserved.

    List of Luca Guadagnino Movies:

    Buy Tickets: ‘After The Hunt’ Movie Showtimes

    Buy Luca Guadagnino Movies on Amazon

    RCitUbJz
  • Movie Review: ‘The Amateur’

    Rami Malek as Heller in 20th Century Studios' 'The Amateur'. Photo by John Wilson. © 2024 20th Century Studios. All Rights Reserved.
    Rami Malek as Heller in 20th Century Studios’ ‘The Amateur’. Photo by John Wilson. © 2024 20th Century Studios. All Rights Reserved.

    ‘The Amateur’ receives 6 out of 10 stars.

    Opening in theaters April 11 is ‘The Amateur,’ directed by James Hawes and starring Rami Malek, Laurence Fishburne, Rachel Brosnahan, Caitriona Balfe, Holt McCallany, Julianne Nicholson, Michael Stuhlbarg, Danny Sapani, and Jon Bernthal.

    Related Article: Laurence Fishburne Talks ‘Slingshot’ and Working with Casey Affleck

    Initial Thoughts

    Rami Malek as Heller in 20th Century Studios' 'The Amateur'. Photo by John Wilson. © 2024 20th Century Studios. All Rights Reserved.
    Rami Malek as Heller in 20th Century Studios’ ‘The Amateur’. Photo by John Wilson. © 2024 20th Century Studios. All Rights Reserved.

    It’s something that a lot of moviegoers of a certain age all say they want: an adult, intelligent, dramatic thriller, perhaps based on a novel but not adapted from already heavily exploited IP, comic books, toys, or video games. For a little while, ‘The Amateur’ seems to check that box. Based on a novel by Robert Littell (which was filmed previously in 1981 as a Canadian production starring John Savage), directed by James Hawes (who’s got episodes of ‘Doctor Who,’ ‘Black Mirror,’ ‘Snowpiercer,’ and ‘Slow Horses’ under his belt), and featuring an admirable cast of seasoned, reliable actors, ‘The Amateur’ seems almost like a throwback to a different era of filmmaking.

    In the end, however, it doesn’t quite live up to its potential. With a largely TV background, Hawes directs the film in almost leisurely, episodic fashion, giving it a stop-and-start pace that never really builds in tension. And too many of the characters – including the lead – are either underused or underdeveloped, leaving the feeling that there’s a longer film – or perhaps, yes, a TV show – somewhere on the cutting room floor.

    Story and Direction

    (L to R) Rami Malek as Heller and Holt McCallany as Moore in 20th Century Studios' 'The Amateur'. Photo by Jonathan Olley. © 2024 20th Century Studios. All Rights Reserved.
    (L to R) Rami Malek as Heller and Holt McCallany as Moore in 20th Century Studios’ ‘The Amateur’. Photo by Jonathan Olley. © 2024 20th Century Studios. All Rights Reserved.

    Rami Malek plays Charlie Heller, an extremely introverted CIA cryptographer whose wife Sarah (Rachel Brosnahan) has to fly off to London for some kind of conference (we don’t really know what she does). But it’s only a couple of days before Charlie is pulled into the office of Deputy CIA Director Moore (Holt McCallany) and informed that Sarah has been killed in a brutal terrorist attack.

    A stunned Charlie wants the CIA to retaliate, but when Moore and another superior, Caleb (Danny Sapani), drag their feet, Charlie does some digging – that’s his job – and discovers that Moore has been running a number of unauthorized black ops, some of them against our own allies and involving members of the same terrorist group. So he extorts Moore and Caleb instead: he’ll reveal everything about their operations to the public and the press – unless they give him enough training to go hunt down his wife’s murderers himself.

    Forcing their hand for the moment (“What else do you want?” asks a disbelieving Moore. “An Aston-Martin? A jet-pack?”), Charlie comes under the tutelage of master assassin Henderson (Laurence Fishburne). He quickly learns that he can’t shoot worth s**t, but he can build a mean explosive and hack his way into any surveillance or computer system, both of which come in handy when he escapes and heads for Europe after getting wind that Moore plans to have Henderson kill him.

    (L to R) Rami Malek and Caitríona Balfe in 'The Amateur'. Photo courtesy of 20th Century Studios. © 2024 20th Century Studios. All Rights Reserved.
    (L to R) Rami Malek and Caitríona Balfe in ‘The Amateur’. Photo courtesy of 20th Century Studios. © 2024 20th Century Studios. All Rights Reserved.

    Once overseas, Charlie begins tracking down the people responsible for his wife’s murder, tormenting them in cleverly sadistic ways: in Paris, the sole woman in the group (Barbara Probst) is locked in an isolation booth at an allergy clinic and choked on pumped-in pollen, before she and Charlie engage in a vicious fight that doesn’t end well; later in Madrid, one of the terrorists meets a watery end when Charlie blows up the high-rise glass swimming pool he’s in (which you’ve seen in the trailer about 400 times by now). But as the CIA closes in, Charlie asks for help from “Inquiline” (Caitriona Balfe), an informant he’s been speaking with for years who helps point him in the direction of mastermind Horst Schiller (Michael Stuhlbarg).

    James Hawes directs all this in an almost casual fashion, with the occasional shocking bursts of violence (many played in enclosed spaces) frequently followed up by dialogue scenes that dial the energy back down. “How will you fill the silence?” Inquiline asks Charlie at one point, after revealing that she lost a loved one and missed all his sounds around their home. Charlie’s response is to fill it with noise, screams, explosions, and drinks – a sly nod, perhaps, to the much more haunted James Bond of Ian Fleming’s novels than the film franchise. In a way, ‘The Amateur’ is an anti-Bond film: none of this is glamorous, jet-setting or particularly exotic, and Charlie increasingly loses more of his humanity as he pursues his goal.

    Unfortunately, these interesting ideas aren’t given more than lip service. ‘The Amateur’ never delves too deeply below the surface, and its 10 screenwriters (only two are credited) fall back on only superficial and predictable thriller tropes. The villain even rolls out a version of the old “we’re not that different” chestnut toward the film’s end, an indication that despite an attempt at a more thoughtful approach, ‘The Amateur’ is slickly professional and nothing more.

    Cast and Performances

    (L to R) Rami Malek as Heller and Rachel Brosnahan as Sarah in 20th Century Studio's 'The Amateur'. Photo courtesy of 20th Century Studios. © 2024 20th Century Studios. All Rights Reserved.
    (L to R) Rami Malek as Heller and Rachel Brosnahan as Sarah in 20th Century Studio’s ‘The Amateur’. Photo courtesy of 20th Century Studios. © 2024 20th Century Studios. All Rights Reserved.

    The cast here is great on paper, but despite working hard a lot of them end up shortchanged. Malek is front and center for most of the two hours, but while this Oscar-winning actor has charisma and presence, his retiring performance as Charlie Heller is both nuanced and self-defeating. We want to believe Charlie’s turn from reserved, intensely non-verbal analyst to cold-blooded killer, but the lack of a fully defined character and even some background (does Charlie have parents? Does his dead wife? Is he possibly on the spectrum?) doesn’t put enough texture on Charlie’s character to make him fully come alive.

    Laurence Fishburne as Henderson in 20th Century Studios' 'The Amateur'. Photo by Jonathan Olley. © 2024 20th Century Studios. All Rights Reserved.
    Laurence Fishburne as Henderson in 20th Century Studios’ ‘The Amateur’. Photo by Jonathan Olley. © 2024 20th Century Studios. All Rights Reserved.

    The same could be said of much of the rest of the ensemble. Laurence Fishburne probably comes off best and gives us the sense of a more complex soul underneath his tough exterior, but he only shows up sporadically. Rachel Brosnahan’s presence as Charlie’s wife is as ghostly as the flashbacks she’s in. Holt McCallany (so good in ‘The Iron Claw’) might as well have a big ‘VILLAIN’ sign stamped across his forehead, while Michael Stuhlbarg goes for the restrained, cultured heavy in his five or so minutes on screen. But the shortest end of the stick is handed to Jon Bernthal as a CIA spook who turns up in exactly two scenes, neither of which have any real point to them at all. We have to believe a lot of his material got the chop – why would you hire Jon Bernthal and give him nothing to do?

    Final Thoughts

    Rami Malek in 'The Amateur'. Photo: 20th Century Studios.
    Rami Malek in ‘The Amateur’. Photo: 20th Century Studios.

    Its initially restrained pacing and low-key atmosphere had us on board with ‘The Amateur’ at first, but Malek’s performance and the film itself never quite catch fire. Too many red herrings – like the completely bizarre reappearance of Bernthal late in the film – also diffuse any rising sense of danger or confrontation.

    ‘The Amateur’ does have its moments: the fight scenes provide a jolt of whiplash, violent oomph, and Charlie’s inventive traps for his targets are the thriller equivalents of something out of a ‘Saw’ film. While ‘The Amateur’ does provide a certain level of entertainment for a more grown-up audience, it may not be enough to get them to a movie theater – which is exactly where we need more of this stuff.

    CRr1il42r35lBPrjswxVt6

    What is the plot of ‘The Amateur’?

    A quiet CIA cryptographer (Rami Malek) is driven by grief and vengeance to seek out the terrorists who killed his wife (Rachel Brosnahan), but soon finds himself pursued by his own agency instead.

    Who is in the cast of ‘The Amateur’?

    • Rami Malek as Charles Heller
    • Laurence Fishburne as Robert Henderson
    • Rachel Brosnahan as Sarah
    • Caitríona Balfe as Inquiline
    • Jon Bernthal as The Bear
    • Michael Stuhlbarg as Horst Schiller
    • Holt McCallany as CIA Deputy Director Alex Moore
    • Danny Sapani as Caleb
    • Julianne Nicholson as CIA Director Samantha O’Brien
    Rami Malek as Heller in 20th Century Studio's 'The Amateur'. Photo by John Wilson. © 2024 20th Century Studios. All Rights Reserved.
    Rami Malek as Heller in 20th Century Studio’s ‘The Amateur’. Photo by John Wilson. © 2024 20th Century Studios. All Rights Reserved.

    List of Rami Malek Movies and TV Shows:

    Buy Tickets: ‘The Amateur’ Movie Showtimes

    Buy Rami Malek Movies on Amazon

    QNJwtf5S
  • John Goodman, Jesse Plemons and More Join Alejandro G. Iñárritu’s New Movie

    (Left) John Goodman in 'The Big Lebowski'. Photo: Gramercy Pictures. (Center) Jesse Plemons in 'Kinds of Kindness'. Photo: Searchlight Pictures. (Right) Riz Ahmed in 'Sound of Metal'. Photo: Amazon Studios.
    (Left) John Goodman in ‘The Big Lebowski’. Photo: Gramercy Pictures. (Center) Jesse Plemons in ‘Kinds of Kindness’. Photo: Searchlight Pictures. (Right) Riz Ahmed in ‘Sound of Metal’. Photo: Amazon Studios.

    Preview:

    • John Goodman, Jesse Plemons, Riz Ahmed and more are joining a new Tom Cruise movie.
    • Alejandro G. Iñárritu is in the director’s chair.
    • The movie will focus on a powerful man looking to prove he’s humanity’s savior.

    Word broke back in March that Tom Cruise –– who has spent the last few years focused almost entirely on making the latest two ‘Mission: Impossible’ movies (the next will be out in 2025) –– had finally found something else to do other than crazy stunts as Ethan Hunt.

    Under his deal at Warner Bros., Cruise boarded the new film from ‘Birdman’ and ‘The Revenant’ director Alejandro G. Iñárritu, though details were scant at the time.

    20065702

    Now we have a little more to go on, including that Iñárritu has built quite the cast around Cruise, with John Goodman, Sandra Hüller, Michael Stuhlbarg, Jesse Plemons and Sophie Wilde all officially aboard and Riz Ahmed close to a deal.

    What’s the story of Alejandro G. Iñárritu’s new movie?

    Alejandro G. Iñárritu accepts the Oscar® for Achievement in directing, for work on 'The Revenant' during the live ABC Telecast of The 88th Oscars® at the Dolby® Theatre in Hollywood, CA on Sunday, February 28, 2016. Credit/Provider: Aaron Poole / ©A.M.P.A.S. Copyright: Scott Diussa.
    Alejandro G. Iñárritu accepts the Oscar® for Achievement in directing, for work on ‘The Revenant’ during the live ABC Telecast of The 88th Oscars® at the Dolby® Theatre in Hollywood, CA on Sunday, February 28, 2016. Credit/Provider: Aaron Poole / ©A.M.P.A.S. Copyright: Scott Diussa.

    Per Deadline, the new film is something the director co-wrote with Sabina Berman, Alexander Dinelaris and Nicolas Giacobone, and focuses on the most powerful man in the world (we’ll go ahead and assume that’s who Cruise will play, but there’s no official word on that yet), who embarks on a frantic mission to prove he is humanity’s savior before the disaster he’s unleashed destroys everything.

    In addition to starring, Cruise will also produce the new movie.

    Related Article: Tom Cruise is Making a Deal to Star in Alejandro G. Iñárritu’s Next Film

    What about the new cast for the Iñárritu/Cruise movie?

    2023's 'Anatomy of a Fall.' Photo: Le Pacte.
    2023’s ‘Anatomy of a Fall.’ Photo: Le Pacte.

    The filmmaker has gathered quite the assortment for this new project, which isn’t surprising given that he’s won (and steered actors to) several Oscars in his time.

    Goodman, of course, needs little introduction as he’s been a working actor for years, currently to be found leading the cast of ‘Roseanne’ sitcom ‘The Conners’.

    Hüller is best known for starring in last year’s ‘Anatomy of a Fall’, for which she was nominated for an Oscar and won several other awards.

    Stuhlbarg is a character acting and supporting stalwart who most recently cropped up in Apple’s ‘The Instigators’.

    Plemons was last seen in Yorgos Lanthimos’ ‘Kinds of Kindness’ and won Best Actor at Cannes for the anthology film.

    Ahmed won an Oscar for live-action short film ‘The Long Goodbye’ and nominated for another starring in ‘Sound of Metal’.

    And finally, Wilde is perhaps not as well-known as the others, but did good work in horror movie ‘Talk to Me’ last year. She’s also been seen in ‘Everything Now’ and a miniseries called ‘Boy Swallows World’.

    When will Iñárritu’s new movie be on screens?

    There are no details about the new movie’s release, which is a co-production of Warner Bros. and Legendary. But you’d have to figure it’ll take aim at awards season next year given the talent involved.

    Alejandro G. Iñárritu poses backstage with the Oscar® for Original screenplay, for work on “Birdman or (The Unexpected Virtue of Ignorance)” during the live ABC Telecast of The 87th Oscars® at the Dolby® Theatre in Hollywood, CA on Sunday, February 22, 2015. Credit/Provider: Aaron Poole / ©A.M.P.A.S. Copyright: ©A.M.P.A.S.
    Alejandro G. Iñárritu poses backstage with the Oscar® for Original screenplay, for work on “Birdman or (The Unexpected Virtue of Ignorance)” during the live ABC Telecast of The 87th Oscars® at the Dolby® Theatre in Hollywood, CA on Sunday, February 22, 2015. Credit/Provider: Aaron Poole / ©A.M.P.A.S. Copyright: ©A.M.P.A.S.

    OtherAlejandro G. Iñárritu Movies:

    Buy Alejandro G. Iñárritu Movies on Amazon

    XqO50fdT
  • Movie Review: ‘The Instigators’

    Matt Damon and Casey Affleck in 'The Instigators'.
    (L to R) Matt Damon and Casey Affleck in ‘The Instigators’. Photo: Apple TV+.

    In theaters now and streaming on Apple TV+ on August 9 is ‘The Instigators,’ directed by Doug Liman and starring Matt Damon, Casey Affleck, Hong Chau, Michael Stuhlbarg, Alfred Molina, Ving Rhames, Paul Walter Hauser, Toby Jones, and Ron Perlman.

    Related Article: First look at Matt Damon and Casey Affleck in ‘The Instigators’ Pictures

    Initial Thoughts

    Matt Damon and Casey Affleck promoting 'The Instigators'.
    (L to R) Matt Damon and Casey Affleck promoting ‘The Instigators’. Photo: Apple TV+.

    Doug Liman hasn’t had a good time with his chosen profession in recent years. The director’s last three efforts, ‘Chaos Walking,’ ‘Locked Down,’ and ‘Road House,’ have all ranged somewhere between mediocre and unwatchable, a steep fall for the filmmaker who once brought us ‘Edge of Tomorrow’ and ‘The Bourne Identity.’ His latest outing, the crime caper comedy ‘The Instigators,’ isn’t a great piece of work, but it’s considerably more entertaining that his previous few films even if it runs into its own problems.

    Much of the entertainment value comes from stars Matt Damon and Casey Affleck (the latter of whom also co-wrote the screenplay with fellow Bostonian Chuck Maclean), whose longtime real-life friendship translates easily into an onscreen chemistry even as their characters are mostly at odds with each other. The two leads are backed up by a generously stacked cast, including the likes of Hong Chau, Ron Perlman, Alfred Molina, Michael Stuhlbarg, and others, all of whom are terrific to watch even if some of them get short-changed by the shaggy script. Like Affleck’s character, a cynical ex-con who’s smarter and has a bigger mouth than everyone else in the room, ‘The Instigators’ is fun until it becomes irritating.

    Story and Direction

    Casey Affleck, director Doug Liman and Matt Damon on the set of 'The Instigators'.
    (L to R) Casey Affleck, director Doug Liman and Matt Damon on the set of ‘The Instigators’. Photo: Apple TV+.

    Damon plays Rory, a divorced ex-Marine who has fallen on hard times and is hinting enough at suicide to alarm his therapist, Dr. Rivera (Chau). But before Rory can “cash in his ticket,” as he says, he has one thing left to do: he wants to see his son, but in order to make that happen he needs to settle exactly $32,480 in child support and other payments. And the only way for him to do that is to participate in a heist being orchestrated by lower-tier mob boss Mr. Besegai (Stuhlbarg) and his right-hand man Richie (Molina), who operate out of a local bakery.

    Besegai’s plan is for a small group of thieves to infiltrate the election headquarters of the corrupt Mayor Miccelli (Perlman), whose re-election is all but reassured and who collects a staggering amount of cash “gifts” every election night from stakeholders who want to curry favor with him. The idea is to go in after the election night party is over and stick the place up, grabbing the cash from the mayor and escaping by boat behind the building. In addition to Rory, the crew will consist of Cobby (Affleck) and Scalvo (Jack Harlow), the latter a hot-headed hood who Mr. Besegai puts in charge of the operation.

    Aside from Scalvo being trigger-happy and Rory being utterly inexperienced at crime (plus depressed and none-too-bright), a series of other variables – such as Miccelli losing the election in an upset – turns the plan completely upside-down. This is the best part of ‘The Instigators’: normally a film like this leads up to the big heist in the third act, and even if things go wrong, the crew improvises their way through it. Here the caper goes sideways in the first half-hour, with every carefully laid-out aspect of the plan going completely in the opposite direction.

    Matt Damon, Casey Affleck, Hong Chau and director Doug Liman from Apple Original Films’ “The Instigators” make an appearance at View Boston.
    (L to R) Matt Damon, Casey Affleck, Hong Chau and director Doug Liman from Apple Original Films’ “The Instigators” make an appearance at View Boston. Photo: Marion Curtis / Starpix for Apple Original Films.

    That leaves Rory and an injured Cobby as unlikely partners and fugitives, fleeing the scene with little cash but with a piece of personal property that’s extremely valuable to the bellowing mayor. After its offbeat first third, ‘The Instigators’ becomes more episodic and unbelievable as Rory and Cobby go on the run, evading hitmen and corrupt cops (including one menacing Special Ops officer played by Ving Rhames) through a series of chases, explosions, and narrow escapes — with Dr. Rivera somehow hitching along as a fake hostage.

    The contrivances necessary to get Rivera into and out of the situation, then back in it again later, also lead to some of the most tonally off moments in the movie. One extended, destructive chase sequence finds Rivera dispensing cliched therapeutic bromides to Rory (“Think about the person you want to be,” she offers improbably) as they careen through the streets of Beantown with a dozen police cars in pursuit. Because this is essentially a comedy, the stakes never feel as real as they could – even with compromised cops, seedy lowlife thugs, and political corruption rampant throughout the story, the script and Liman’s freewheeling direction keep this light and all on a surface level, leading to a somewhat tiresome finale.

    The Cast

    Hong Chau, Casey Affleck and Matt Damon in 'The Instigators'.
    (L to R) Hong Chau, Casey Affleck and Matt Damon in ‘The Instigators’. Photo: Apple TV+.

    Even as the air starts to seep out of the script, ‘The Instigators’ (an odd title, since Rory and Cobby don’t instigate anything, but merely react to their changing circumstances) is kept buoyant through its ensemble of sturdy, always reliable players. As mentioned earlier, Damon and Affleck provide most of the appeal here: the way that Damon’s morose straight man and Affleck’s jaded, seen-it-all crook bounce off each other provides most of the movie’s fun. Damon’s Rory has a wounded working-class decency, a guy who’s been pushed to the edge both by his own mistakes and things not in his control who only gradually retakes command of his own destiny as best he can.

    Affleck’s Cobby is the source of most of the movie’s humor, as his disaffected demeanor, rogue-ish charm, and constant barrage of jokes, pokes, and non-sequiturs hide a street-level, quick-on-his-feet intelligence that gets him and Rory both into and out of every scrape. He becomes irritating not just to his targets but to us as well, and we’re kind of onboard when some of those targets tell him to shut the f**k up.

    Hong Chau is always superb even though she has the least plausible material to work with and a character who verges in the edge of “therapist stereotype.” The rest, especially Stuhlbarg, Molina, Toby Jones (as Miccelli’s mild-mannered accountant), and Perlman as his Trumpy, self-serving boss, are all a pleasure to watch even if their characters are paper-thin.

    Final Thoughts

    Casey Affleck and Matt Damon promoting 'The Instigators'.
    (L to R) Casey Affleck and Matt Damon promoting ‘The Instigators’. Photo: Apple TV+.

    “Paper-thin” is a good way to describe ‘The Instigators’: it all operates on a surface level, never resonating emotionally too much and not quite settling on the right balance of comedy, action, and crime thriller. It will make you laugh – or perhaps chuckle quietly – without building to a real comic crescendo.

    Yet Liman keeps it all moving (only the extended finale drags out a bit), gets us in and out of the story in 90 minutes, and provides ample opportunity to watch Damon and Affleck have some fun. There are far worse ways to spend an hour-and-a-half – including a few that Doug Liman has provided before this.

    ‘The Instigators’ receives 6.5 out of 10 stars.

    2ucW3srovoDAzs9lhsHdh5

    What is the plot of ‘The Instigators’?

    A desperate, depressed dad (Matt Damon) and a cynical, wisecracking ex-con (Casey Affleck) find themselves roped into a brazen robbery that quickly goes sideways, with the unlikely duo soon hunted by hitmen, the police, the corrupt mayor of Boston, and the dad’s very concerned therapist (Hong Chau).

    Who is in the cast of ‘The Instigators’?

    • Matt Damon as Rory
    • Casey Affleck as Cobby
    • Hong Chau as Dr. Donna Rivera
    • Paul Walter Hauser as Booch
    • Michael Stuhlbarg as Mr. Besegai
    • Ving Rhames as Frank Toomey
    • Alfred Molina as Richie Dechico
    • Toby Jones as Alan Flynn
    • Jack Harlow as Scalvo
    • Ron Perlman as Mayor Miccelli
    Matt Damon and Casey Affleck in 'The Instigators'.
    (L to R) Matt Damon and Casey Affleck in ‘The Instigators’. Photo: Apple TV+.

    Other Movies Similar to ‘The Instigators’:

    Buy Matt Damon Movies on Amazon

    Buy Casey Affleck Movies on Amazon

    3suKBnMX
  • Matt Damon and Casey Affleck in First ‘The Instigators’ Images

    Hong Chau, Casey Affleck and Matt Damon in 'The Instigators'.
    (L to R) Hong Chau, Casey Affleck and Matt Damon in ‘The Instigators’. Photo: Apple TV+.

    Preview:

    • Matt Damon and Casey Affleck are thieves in the first images from ‘The Instigators’.
    • Doug Liam directed the crime thriller.
    • The movie will land on Apple TV+ on August 9th.

    We might most famously think of ‘Good Will Hunting’ in terms of Matt Damon and Casey Affleck sharing the screen (then alongside the latter’s brother Ben), but they were also both in ‘Oppenheimer’ last year.

    But later in 2024, we’ll see them in meatier roles for a new crime thriller called ‘The Instigators’, in which they play two thieves pulling off a desperate robbery.

    Apple TV+ was quick to snap this one up and has the first images from the movie online.

    2ucW3srovoDAzs9lhsHdh5

    What’s the story of ‘The Instigators’?

    Rory (Damon) and Cobby (Affleck) are reluctant partners: a desperate father and an ex-con thrown together to pull off a robbery of the ill-gained earnings of a corrupt politician. But when the heist goes wrong, the two find themselves engulfed in a whirlwind of chaos, pursued not only by police, but also backwards bureaucrats and vengeful crime bosses.

    Completely out of their depth, they convince Rory’s therapist (Hong Chau) to join their riotous getaway through the city, where they must put aside their differences and work together to evade capture –– or worse.

    Related Article: 10 Things We Learned at the ’Air’ Press Conference with Cast and Crew

    Who is making ‘The Instigators’?

    Casey Affleck, director Doug Liman and Matt Damon on the set of 'The Instigators'.
    (L to R) Casey Affleck, director Doug Liman and Matt Damon on the set of ‘The Instigators’. Photo: Apple TV+.

    Affleck co-wrote the script with Chuck MacLean, and Doug Liman is in the director’s chair.

    Here’s what Affleck told Entertainment Weekly about his inspirations:

    “The inspiration for this was definitely ‘Midnight Run’ and ‘Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid’. I’ve always wanted to do a buddy action comedy.”

    And for Damon, this was a chance to reunite with his ‘Bourne Identity’ director. This is what he said:

    “I absolutely love working with Doug. I can’t believe it took us 20 years to find something else to do together. Doug is one of the most creatively tenacious people I’ve ever met. He just won’t stop until the movie is as good as it can be, and that is the best possible thing you can feel from a director. I trust him completely.”

    Who else is in ‘The Instigators’?

    The movie also stars Michael Stuhlbarg, Paul Walter Hauser, Ving Rhames, Alfred Molina, Toby Jones, Jack Harlow and Ron Perlman.

    Here’s Affleck on how some of the cast fit in:

    “‘The Instigators’ is about two strangers who are hired for a heist. They become frenemies and then become friends while Jack Harlow yells at us, Paul Walter Hauser insults us, Ving Rhames hunts us, and Hong Chau keeps us alive.”

    When will ‘The Instigators’ land on Apple TV+

    Apple TV+ will start streaming the new movie on August 9th. Hopefully Liman is already aware it’ll be going directly there; we don’t need another ‘Road House’ protest.

    Matt Damon and Casey Affleck in 'The Instigators'.
    (L to R) Matt Damon and Casey Affleck in ‘The Instigators’. Photo: Apple TV+.

    Other Movies Similar to ‘The Instigators’:

    Buy Matt Damon Movies on Amazon

    dv5vA2Us