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Do Pedro Pascal and Joaquin Phoenix ever feel like plastic bags, drifting through the wind, wanting to start again?
Ari Aster’s Eddington, starring Pedro Pascal and Joaquin Phoenix, witnesses a slow start. Read on for the details!
Covid and mask mandates are still a sensitive subject for many. Is this too much, too soon?
That's not a unique reaction to seeing this movie. "Eddington" is currently at 67% "fresh" according to critics on Rotten Tomatoes and 64% "hot" by audiences. People are either loving this movie, or ...
The biggest problem in Ari Aster's small community of Eddington is sitting quietly in the townspeople's pockets.
Eddington is, I think, less about political axe grinding, or even point making, and more about what it feels like to have all ...
While confusing and drawn-out at times, “Eddington” is certainly a movie that makes you think. In the end, the people of ...
4hon MSN
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 ...
Moviegoers have grown accustomed to expecting a lack of normalcy in Aster's movies. His first three films — “Hereditary,” ...
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 ...
13hOpinion
Jacobin on MSNEddington: Western Noir Chaos Made BoringWriter-director Ari Aster tends to end his narratives in careening mayhem that finally exhausts itself in an absurdist state ...
NEW YORK (AP) — James Gunn’s “Superman” showed staying power in its second weekend at North American box offices, collecting ...
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