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    Movie Review

    Joaquin Phoenix takes 3-hour Kafkaesque journey in ultra-weird Beau is Afraid

    Alex Bentley
    Apr 20, 2023 | 2:33 pm

    In writer/director Ari Aster’s relatively brief feature career, he has already established himself as a horror filmmaker of note, helming the acclaimed Hereditary in 2018 and the gonzo Midsommar in 2019. As creative and interesting as those films are, they have nothing on the out-there energy that inhabits every second of his new film, the three-hour long Beau is Afraid.

    Joaquin Phoenix plays Beau, an anxiety-ridden milquetoast who is barely capable of stepping out of his own apartment. He lives in a hellhole of a neighborhood where the streets are filled with unsavory characters, a naked man stabs people regularly, and a general feeling of danger pervades the area.

    When Beau receives news that his mom has died, his attempts at getting back for her funeral are repeatedly delayed, including encounters with Grace (Amy Ryan) and Roger (Nathan Lane), a well-meaning but strange couple; a theater troupe that lives in the woods; and more. All the while, Beau finds himself remembering and/or hallucinating about his childhood, his possible future, and the meaning of his life.

    The term “Kafkaesque” has be applied to a lot of different movies over the years, but Aster has made a film with the concept firmly at the front of the story. The absurdity of the world through which Beau lives and travels cannot be overstated. Some people seem relatively normal on the surface, but almost everyone acts in wholly unnatural manners, as if the off-the-wall things taking place around them aren’t actually happening.

    The film is so packed with bizarre sights and occurrences that you can almost forgive its inordinate length. Weird stuff happens constantly, making for a highly entertaining story that’s also enormously confusing. There are times when Aster keeps the camera stationary on Beau's face for what seems like minutes, and despite the slowness of these and other scenes, Aster has sufficiently conditioned the audience to patiently wait for the next crazy thing to occur.

    Anyone hoping for more horror from the burgeoning horror auteur is mostly left wanting. While much of what Beau experiences in the story is worthy of its own section in hell, very little qualifies as something that would scare modern audiences. There is way more comedy in the film, as it's next to impossible to witness all the inexplicable spectacles it has to offer and not laugh, despite the occasional tragic event that happens.

    Phoenix is uniquely suited for this role, as he’s shown the ability to be a chameleon throughout his career. The sad-sack nature of Beau comes through in almost everything he does, and the bewilderment he expresses makes him the ideal avatar for the audience. Also great are Ryan, Lane, Parker Posey, Zoe Lister-Jones, and, in a late but crucial role, Patti Lupone. A special note should be made of finding Phoenix doppelganger Armen Nahapetian to play the young Beau; the fact that he’s real and not a CGI creation is perhaps one of the strangest things in the film.

    It takes a certain level of patience to stick with Beau is Afraid all the way through, but those who do will be rewarded with an imaginative story that never stops being thought-provoking, even if you’re not entirely sure what Aster is trying to say.

    ---

    Beau is Afraid opens in theaters on April 21.

    Nathan Lane, Joaquin Phoenix, and Amy Ryan in Beau is Afraid

    Photo courtesy of A24 Films

    Nathan Lane, Joaquin Phoenix, and Amy Ryan in Beau is Afraid

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    Movie Review

    Lust eclipses romance in new adaptation of 'Wuthering Heights'

    Alex Bentley
    Feb 12, 2026 | 2:15 pm
    Jacob Elordi and Margot Robbie in Wuthering Heights
    Photo courtesy of Warner Bros. Pictures
    Jacob Elordi and Margot Robbie in Wuthering Heights.

    Emily Brontë’s 1847 novel Wuthering Heights is one of those classic books assigned in high school English classes, and it has received a number of film adaptations over the years, each of which differ in numerous ways from the source material. Purists won’t receive any reprieve from Emerald Fennell’s 2026 adaptation, with a title that is stylized as "Wuthering Heights” for good reason.

    Cathy (played as an adult by Margot Robbie) and Heathcliff (Jacob Elordi) have known each other their entire lives, with Cathy’s alcoholic and inveterate gambler father (Martin Clunes) taking in Heathcliff on a whim when he was a boy. The two bond as they grow up together, although Cathy always seems to have an eye on moving up in society from their relatively impoverished lifestyle.

    Cathy finally gets her wish when the rich Linton familyled by Edgar (Shazad Latif), moves in down the road, Despite discovering she has feelings for the now grown-up Heathcliff, Cathy sees Edgar as her way out and agrees to marry him. A scorned Heathcliff flees, returning years later as mysteriously wealthy. His reappearance ignites something in Cathy’s soul, and the two engage in a perhaps unwise affair.

    Fennell (Promising Young Woman, Saltburn) infuses the dusty material with an energy that’s not typically present in stories set in this particular time and place. Aside from the occasional Charli XCX song (the singer created a whole concept album for the film), the film looks and feels like a period piece, albeit one that doesn’t get bogged down in the drudgery that can sometimes come from films set in the distant past.

    Much of that has to do with the lust the filmmaker puts into the story. Even if you’re not familiar with Brontë’s book, you can rest assured that Fennell has strayed far from the text, giving Cathy and Heathcliff thoughts and actions unthinkable in the 19th century. Fennell plays with expectations by opening the film with audio featuring creaking noises and a man grunting, conjuring up a situation far different than what is actually happening, and she also makes liberal use of rain, sweat, and tears to make the actors enticing.

    What she can’t do, however, is make the two lead characters compelling. Cathy is a striver who never seems to know what she wants out of life, and Heathcliff goes from a bore to a brute over the course of the film, with no clear indication that he likes anybody, much less Cathy. Anyone expecting some kind of grand romance will be disappointed as Fennell is much more interested in making the film weird, like having the walls of Cathy’s room look like her skin, complete with freckles.

    Robbie and Elordi do well enough with the material, and it’s clear that both of them are committed to bringing Fennell’s vision to life. Their styles tend to balance each other out, and if the story had been committed to their characters’ relationship, they might be lauded for their chemistry. In the end, though, the supporting actors feel more interesting, including ones played by Hong Chau, Alison Miller, and Clunes.

    This version of Wuthering Heights should never be construed as an alternative to reading the book for any high schoolers out there. While Fennell makes the film interesting with her technical filmmaking choices, the story never finds its footing as it fails to sell the one thing that it seems to promise.

    ---

    Wuthering Heights opens in theaters on February 13.

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