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Ari Aster explains the thinking behind the ending of 'Eddington,' his movie about a small town in crisis at the peak of the COVID-19 pandemic.
Filmmaker Ari Aster returns with a large step outside his comfort zone with a COVID drama that, like his other films, is a ...
As Shakespeare once said, “Like a tale told by idiots, signifying nothing.” This dark comedy won an audience Award at the Tribeca Film Festival, but not from Don. It’s a Jewish version of “Meet the ...
Hitting on pressure points ranging from George Floyd’s murder to paper towel hoarding, “Eddington” is an edgelord’s dream.
One of the final glimpses we see of Cross is at the grand opening of a data center, built right next to the paltry town of ...
Even as Aster boldly introduces all manner of Trump-era malaise, “Eddington” is deliberately opaque.
A number of standouts from May’s Cannes Film Festival will also play in Toronto, such as Jafar Panahi’s Palme d’Or winner “It ...
Somehow still, the film manages to be hilarious, heart-wrenching, shocking, infuriating, and genuinely exciting, while still ...
While confusing and drawn-out at times, “Eddington” is certainly a movie that makes you think. In the end, the people of ...
Stories help us sift through random events of our lives into something coherent. COVID was a seminal time in American life, ...
Moviegoers have grown accustomed to expecting a lack of normalcy in Aster's movies. His first three films — “Hereditary,” ...
Ari Aster's latest film is Eddington, but its relatively grounded nature has led many to question whether the film is telling a true story.