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  • ‘Bugonia’ Writer Will Tracy on Tackling America’s Troubled Present With a Bonkers Basement Thriller

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    Remaking a Korean cult film once known as “the cursed masterpiece” could easily have seemed like a reckless bet in today’s variously challenged movie business. But for Yorgos Lanthimos and his stars, Emma Stone and Jesse Plemons, former Succession writer Will Tracy’s script was simply so good that taking a swing at the uncategorizably strange premise that would become Bugonia was a no-brainer.

    “This was the first time we received a script and were like, ‘Whoa, let’s go make this right away,’ and it basically doesn’t require any process,” says Stone.

    “Up until this point, I’d read scripts, but I’ve never been so excited immediately afterward that I would say, ‘This is almost ready for me to make just as it is,’” Lanthimos recalls. “To be handed something that was already so great was a tremendous gift.”

    Bugonia was released this fall and has earned a modest $40 million in cinemas, but it has proved a hit on digital platforms and is considered a strong Oscars contender in several categories.

    The movie is a loose adaptation of the 2003 South Korean cult oddity Save the Green Planet!, a genre-blending black comedy about a troubled young man who kidnaps a corporate CEO he believes is an alien bent on destroying Earth. The original was the debut of Jang Joon-hwan, a close early collaborator of Bong Joon Ho, but its commercial failure stalled Jang’s career for more than a decade, even as the film gained a reputation as a misunderstood classic.

    The remake, co-produced by Korean studio CJ ENM and distributed by Focus Features, took shape after Ari Aster and Lars Knudsen, longtime fans of the original, signed on as producers under their Square Peg banner and brought in Tracy, fresh from penning The Menu and several episodes of season three of Succession, to craft an English-language version.

    Plemons stars as Teddy, a paranoid beekeeper who, with the help of his pliant cousin Don (first-time actor Aidan Delbis), kidnaps Michelle Fuller (Stone), the steely CEO of a pharmaceutical and pesticide empire he believes is an extraterrestrial leader in disguise. Much of the film unfolds in Teddy’s basement in a tense, darkly comic standoff that pits conspiracy thinking against center-left corporate rationalism, blurring the boundaries between political grievance and cosmic delusion.

    Tracy’s script skewers the hollow moral language of powerful corporate elites like Stone’s character, while also probing the anger and alienation driving Teddy and Don, treating their bonkers beliefs with both satire and unsettling flashes of emotional truth.

    “Will really pulled off a magic trick,” adds Plemons. “You have two characters with totally opposing beliefs — and my character, Teddy, is preaching his beliefs nonstop through the whole movie — but the film itself somehow doesn’t feel preachy and leaves it all to the viewer to decide.”

    Tracy boasts a top-shelf comedy writing pedigree. After rising from writer to editor-in-chief of The Onion, he moved into television writing on Last Week Tonight with John Oliver before becoming a key writer and executive producer on Succession, where he earned multiple Emmys. His feature screenwriting debut came with the acclaimed dark comedy The Menu, which he also executive-produced.

    The Hollywood Reporter connected with Tracy over Zoom to discuss how he transformed a Korean cult film into a distinctly American fable, how isolation and paranoia seeped into his writing process, and why he believes the ambiguity of the film’s shocking ending is its most radical political gesture.

    How did this project come to you?

    It came to me through Ari Aster, who’s a producer on the film and a friend of mine. We had lunch in the East Village, where he lives, and he mentioned this Korean film called Save the Green Planet! from 2003. I’d never heard of it or seen it. He didn’t tell me much — just that he thought there might be something there I’d find interesting. It was hard at the time to find a properly translated copy, so he sent me what was basically a janky Vimeo link.

    I watched it and immediately understood what he meant. I think he knew a bit about my work on Succession and had seen The Menu, and somehow sensed I’d connect with something in this very peculiar Korean film. It’s quite Korean in its sensibility and political preoccupations, but I also saw something in it that felt contemporary and distinctly Anglo-American. Without possibly anticipating it, those original filmmakers had created a premise that felt quite right for an American adaptation in these times.

    What did you see in it? Because on one level, it’s one of those wildly original cult films where, from a distance, it’s natural to say, “How could you ever remake that?” The original is such a unique blend of tones — it’s kind of a miracle it ever worked in the first place.

    Exactly. I decided very early on — within a few minutes of watching — that if I were going to adapt it, I’d take a very free hand. I’d never really written an adaptation before, and I wanted both films to stand on their own. Otherwise, what’s the point of remaking it, right?

    The original is quite preoccupied with this brutal torture situation and the parallel police investigation. I decided to move away from both of those and make something more contained — a movie about a conversation. What if I could put two people who represent extreme ends of an American cultural divide in a room together and let them have it out? People who’ve only encountered each other online, who think they know what the other believes, who’ve already been having a “pre-argument” in their heads for years. I wanted to see what happens when they finally face each other and talk.

    As their rhetorical facades start to fall, we begin to see who they really are, what they really want, and what’s truly motivating them.

    Tell me a little about the circumstances of your writing process — in general and on this project. 

    Well, as I said, I only watched the original film once — I didn’t want it living in my head. I took a few notes, then wrote a full scene-by-scene outline, down to the slug lines and key bits of dialogue. That’s usually the heavy lifting for me; once I have the outline, the script comes quickly.

    When it came time to write, I had just returned from the Succession writers’ room for season three — this was March 2020. We were supposed to start shooting that spring, and then, of course, COVID hit. Suddenly, we were in full lockdown in New York. My wife and I had just had our first baby, and we were living in a tiny studio apartment in Brooklyn.

    That’s when I wrote the script — actually, I wrote while I had COVID myself for part of the time. Because I was locked down and had nowhere to go, I wrote it quickly — about three weeks, which is fast for me. In hindsight, I think that atmosphere of confusion, paranoia and uncertainty helped. Not knowing what information to trust, not knowing what the world would look like on the other side — it all seeped into the script in a way that I think benefitted it.

    That’s fascinating. It’s all there in the film.

    Yeah, and what’s really interesting is that five years later, rather than feeling like a period piece, the story feels even more resonant. I think that’s because we’re still, in many ways, living downstream from that moment — we’re psychologically still in those COVID months, just in a different form.

    Will Tracy speaks onstage at the BAFTA New York screening of Bugonia at Village East Cinema.

    When Yorgos came on board, what kind of collaboration did the two of you have? He told me recently that he loved your script and didn’t want to change much, which is very uncommon for him. 

    Yeah, he told me that, usually, when he directs a script, he’s involved from very early on — helping guide the structure and development. But in this case, he came in when it was already quite close to shootable. He just had a few ideas to make it more directable for him.

    One big change he suggested was structural. In my version, we began by meeting the two cousins — Jesse Plemons’ and Aiden’s characters — as they lay out their plans, then we jumped to Emma Stone’s character. Yorgos proposed intercutting the two introductions: while the cousins talk about their world and beliefs, we see Emma’s character going through her morning routine, getting ready for work, doing her anti-aging regimen, heading into the corporate office. It was a great idea. That adjustment gives the opening a great rhythm.

    He also made some tweaks in the third act, but nothing major. The biggest change was the title. I still had Save the Green Planet! as a placeholder. Yorgos suggested Bugonia, which comes from an obscure Greek myth about a colony of bees that arises from the corpse of a cow. We both felt it resonated with the film’s themes. Plus, it sounds like a bug, or an alien planet — or even a flower, or a mental disorder. It has all these vague, poetic associations that felt just right. Greeks know their mythology.

    What were your impressions when you heard Yorgos was going to direct? What makes him right for this kind of material?

    It just felt perfect. I’d written it as a very contained film — mostly three people in a house, talking — which can be a challenge to make visually dynamic. You need a director who can make a small space feel spectacular. Shooting in VistaVision was such a brilliant choice. Even though we’re in one room, the faces of these actors become these landscapes.

    And then there’s tone. Coming from a comedy background, I’m always wary of a director overplaying humor — making it too broad or satirical. I knew that wouldn’t be a problem with Yorgos. All you have to do is watch Dogtooth or The Favourite to see how he can play absurdity straight. His comedy is dry and precise, grounded in a strange realism even when the world is stylized.

    When I met him and later spent time on set, I realized how lucky I was. Our sensibilities were completely simpatico.

    Lanthimos and Stone say Plemons was a “no-brainer” first pick to play Teddy following their collaboration on the 2024 bleak comedy anthology film Kinds of Kindness, which won Plemons best actor honors at Cannes.

    Courtesy of Focus Features

    One of the things I love about your script is how Teddy, Jesse Plemons’ character, is a conspiracy theorist but one driven by many legitimate, sympathetic grievances — which are embedded within all of these other crazy-sounding ideas. That central element of the story really feels like it captures a core challenge of our time — how do we disentangle the legitimate critiques of neoliberalism from the bonkers radicalism that they have spawned?

    That’s right. And it’s only gotten harder, because in America our current government has quite purposefully and cynically co-opted a lot of conspiratorial thinking to muddy the waters to further their own cultural and political project. So people tend to paint all conspiracy-minded lines of thought with the same brush — right-wing, crazy or stupid — without investigating what’s driving that mindset, and what are the underlying causes for why they are so enraged. 

    In Teddy’s case, he’s absolutely been abused by the system: big pharma, big tech, big agriculture, the government, the police — capitalism generally. He and his community have been misled and mistreated.

    And then, in a larger sense, I think he, like a lot of us, feels isolated and atomized. He kind of looks around his world — or American society, at least — and he doesn’t feel like he’s connected to any community or civic project. Every once in a while he’s told to cast a vote, but what does that even mean? Does he feel like he really has any other agency? I don’t know that I do. Like a lot of people, I more feel like I’m just watching a lot of things get worse and worse. So that fundamental feeling of powerlessness in the face of larger, ominous and obscure forces doesn’t feel very crazy or conspiratorial to me. Even though I’m much more advantaged than someone like Teddy, I understand that feeling, and I have a lot of time for that way of thinking, actually. 

    So it was important that his emotional, political and cultural rationales be well-founded. His methods aren’t sound, but he’s right about a lot. I wanted the audience to empathize with him — not see him as a kook, but as someone making many good arguments.

    And on the flip side, how did you approach Emma Stone’s character? There’s great satire in the way she embodies the farce of a “caring corporate culture.”

    I wanted the audience to be of two minds about her. On one hand, she’s in an impossible situation — she’s been violently kidnapped, she’s terrified, and trying to reason with someone who seems misinformed and unmovable. We empathize with that frustration, with wanting to be heard. And it’s kind of easy for many of us to imagine being in that situation, like, “Oh my gosh, what would I do if I were stuck in her place and had to try to reason with some nut?” 

    But she’s also well practiced in a kind of smooth, frictionless corporate rhetoric, which she’s trying to leverage in this situation. So we have this feeling that she’s not a completely honest or authentic broker. Even before the kidnapping, we sense a disingenuousness to her, even though it’s Emma Stone, who is usually a presence who feels quite easy to access emotionally. She makes compelling points herself, but also some flawed ones that Teddy swats down effectively.

    The goal was to put the audience in that uncomfortable space of not knowing who to side with. That’s an interesting place to be.

    I had a theory about how your script aligns with Yorgos’ sensibility. His films often feel like social experiments, where the audience is positioned to observe human nature from a strangely abstracted distance. Bugonia seems to bring that ambiguity and dread right into the story itself — and it’s one of very immediate contemporary political relevance, which is somewhat unusual for him.

    I think that’s right. Yorgos has always explored themes of social control — power, domination, people forcing others to live within their own constructed realities. In his earlier work, that kind of behavior felt outrageous or surreal. Now it feels almost ordinary. We’ve been encouraged, by design, to live in our own realities — through social media, politics, everything.

    So even though I didn’t set out to write a “Yorgosian” film, it’s absolutely in his wheelhouse. At the same time, it’s probably the most specifically American film he’s made — it’s the only one written by an American — so it has that specific social preoccupation, while still inhabiting an emotional space that suits him perfectly.

    Lanthimos (in tan jacket), DP Robbie Ryan (crouching) and Stone on location in the U.K.

    Atsushi Nishijima/Focus Features

    Did you two talk about that — the meaning and themes of the film?

    Not really, and that’s one of the things I loved about him. Yorgos doesn’t want to overanalyze. We never had those long, “What does it all mean?” conversations. His notes were always specific and practical.

    Because he didn’t over-talk the meaning, no one else did either. He and I are both interested in preserving ambiguity — keeping the mystery alive. We don’t want to lock the film into one interpretation. I like when people leave the theater debating whether it was a happy or sad ending, or who was more sympathetic. Those are the best conversations a movie can make you have.

    Where do you think the film leaves us? What does it resolve — or not resolve?

    I’ve heard people call it bleak, but I’m not sure that’s right. On one level, the planet itself probably has a better shot at survival without us — that’s the practical interpretation. But at the same time, when we see that world without us at the end, we’re still there — our bodies, our traces, these funny, intimate, sad images of who we were. So maybe it’s also a reminder of what we’d be losing — who we are when we’re not shouting at each other, when we’re not reduced to categories. I’m not advocating any one reading, but there’s definitely more than one way to see it.

    One thing that baffled me a little were the flashbacks. They’re so radically different, aesthetically, from everything else in the film. Was that how you wrote them? How are we supposed to read them — as abstract representations of Teddy’s trauma? 

    That was one of the bigger changes Yorgos made. I’m not big on flashbacks, but they felt necessary here, and I worried they’d come off as conventional. Yorgos’ idea was to make them nonliteral — very abstract.

    So they’re not “memories” in the usual sense; we don’t cut from Teddy gazing out a window into a flashback. They just appear, almost violently. They might be the film’s abstract interpretation of his trauma, or his own internal abstraction of it. That ambiguity makes them much more interesting. What could have been clunky exposition became something more poetic and impactful.

    Do you have a favorite scene in Bugonia?

    My favorite scenes are the long confrontations between the two of them — those lengthy, charged chats where Emma and Jesse really go at each other. I love their second chat, when he comes back down to the basement and they have it out a little, and then she says to him, “Teddy, I think I know what’s wrong with you” — and then she launches into this little liberal soliloquy cribbed from centrist liberal newspaper op-ed pages about echo chambers and rabbit holes. He’s quite ready for that, and he counters it beautifully. I’m happy with that scene in particular. The way Jesse and Emma played it is better than I could have hoped or imagined, as the writer. And I think that scene is our first really clear hint that this conversation and this film aren’t going to lead where you expect. 

    From left: Emma Stone, Aidan Delbis and Jesse Plemons arrive at Palazzo del Casinò for the ‘Bugonia’ press conference during the 82nd Venice Film Festival on August 28, 2025.

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    Patrick Brzeski

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  • Reddit Played a Part in Nailing Jesse Plemons’ Suspicious ‘Bugonia’ Character

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    Yorgos LanthimosBugonia is a remake of Save the Green Planet!, though in many ways it’s far less out there than the 2003 South Korean original. And while the basic premise—a conspiracy theorist kidnaps a powerful executive he believes to be an alien planning to destroy Earth—is the same in both films, the nuances of what a conspiracy theorist looks and acts like have been tweaked to serve an America, circa 2025, version of that story.

    In a new interview with Deadline, Bugonia screenwriter Will Tracy keyed in on the character of Teddy, played with just the right jittery, damaged yet determined energy by Jesse Plemons. Some of his most helpful research came from simply visiting websites that Teddy himself might bookmark and return to.

    “I did spend a little bit of time on [Reddit], and maybe not even for research for the film. [Because of] my own weird search for knowledge and answers or something, or some confusion, or maybe a need to understand what people are saying, to feel connected to something … I kind of find myself dipping into those quarters anyway, as an observer,” Tracy said. “So I did quite a bit of that of Reddit and YouTube comments, and even a bit of 4Chan, which was quite hot at the time, but to a certain extent, I didn’t want to make Teddy into kind of a composite of those, whatever the disorders du jour were, I wanted to make a guy who felt like he had his own thing. Even ‘incel,’ which feels culturally valid to call him that in some ways, well, he’s literally not, he’s voluntarily celibate. He’s quite purposeful in that sense.”

    He continued. “I think the other thing I probably had in my head was, and this has been definitely reinforced since with a few recent events, but whenever there’s a thing like this, whether it’s a domestic terrorist or a shooter of some kind, or an assassin, or whatever it is, there’s now, of course, that immediate cultural reaction to sort of assign blame to the other side for that, like, ‘That’s one of theirs,’ or, ‘That’s clearly a right-wing nut job,’ or, ‘That’s a leftist loon.’ And then, of course, we watch what happens. Inevitably, the cliche, it seems to always happen, is that the information comes in and it’s, ‘They’re an anti-fascist registered Republican gun-lover who identifies as non-binary.’ It corresponds to no clear category at all.”

    “And so that was kind of in my head too, that this is someone who maybe cycled through a bunch of different things and didn’t find a story that appealed to them, and so they had to create their own.”

    Of course, in Teddy’s case, his wild ideas are actually correct. Emma Stone’s character, Michelle, is eventually revealed to be an alien. Trying to decide whether or not Teddy is dangerously unstable—or if Michelle is indeed plotting the planet’s demise—is a great part of the movie’s fun. The fact that Teddy feels so alarmingly accurate only enhances that mystery, especially when you find out the truth in the end.

    Want more io9 news? Check out when to expect the latest Marvel, Star Wars, and Star Trek releases, what’s next for the DC Universe on film and TV, and everything you need to know about the future of Doctor Who.

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    Cheryl Eddy

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  • 51 Great Movies From 2025 Now Streaming: ‘One Battle After Another,’ ‘Sinners,’ ‘Bugonia,’ ‘Weapons,’ and More

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    As 2025 comes to a close, the biggest movies of the year are now available to stream from home — quite literally. Disney’s “Lilo & Stitch” is available on Disney+ after earning more than $1 billion at the worldwide box office, while Warner Bros.’ “A Minecraft Movie” is streaming on HBO Max and Prime Video after its $958 million box office run. China’s animated sensation “Ne Zha 2” is ready to watch on HBO Max after earning $2.1 billion worldwide, which makes it the top grosser of 2025. These three movies are the biggest of 2025 along with “Zootopia 2” and “Avatar: Fire and Ash,” both of which are in theaters and won’t arrive on Disney+ until 2026.

    The best movies of the year are also now available to stream. Paul Thomas Anderson’s “One Battle After Another” topped Variety’s best films of 2025 list and is now available on HBO Max. Several other critical favorites and Oscar contenders are also ready for home viewing, from “Bugonia” (Peacock) to “Sorry Baby” (HBO Max), “Frankenstein” (Netflix), “Sinners” (HBO Max), “Weapons” (HBO Max) and more.

    Check out a full rundown below of the best and/or biggest movies of 2025 now available to stream.

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    Zack Sharf

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  • The Score for ‘Bugonia’ Happened in a Truly Unbelievable Way (Exclusive)

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    Bugonia, the new film from director Yorgos Lanthimos, is now available at home, and that’s great news for a few reasons. The most obvious is that the movie is amazing. Emma Stone stars as a CEO who is kidnapped by two men (Jesse Plemons and Aidan Delbis) because they think she’s an alien. It’s a twisty, turny, intense tale told with a unique whimsy only Lanthimos can deliver.

    Another reason it’s great that Bugonia is now at home is that you can control the volume. And, let us tell you, the score for Bugonia is incredible. It’s by composer Jerskin Fendrix, who also did Lanthimos’ previous two films, Kinds of Kindness and Poor Things, and it’s just wholly weird and unexpected. For a movie that’s largely set in a single location, the music at times soars like a sci-fi space opera. At others, it’s a 1970s paranoia thriller. Basically, it’s manic as hell, and it’s easy to understand why once you watch the clip below.

    io9 has an exclusive look at a clip from The Birth of the Bees: The Making of Bugonia, a documentary that’s included on the film’s digital release. In this clip, you’ll get a sense of why Fendrix’s score for the film is so unique. And it’s because he got some truly unbelievable direction from Lanthimos. Here it is.

    As it turns out, Lanthimos did not want Fendrix to know anything about the movie, didn’t let him read the script, and only gave him three keywords: “bees,” “basement,” and “spaceship.” So, from that, you start to understand why the score has all of those different elements.

    Earlier this year, io9 spoke with Lanthimos, and, in our chat, we asked about his relationship with Fendrix and this score in particular. “Well, I knew one thing: that I wanted the music to mostly juxtapose the claustrophobic feel that the movie had and the contained space aspect of it,” the director said.

    “So the first thing I told him was that [he] would not read the script for this film. We’ve worked together with Jerskin on two other films, so [I didn’t want him to] read the script. ‘I’ll give you [three] keywords to work on. And then you’ll compose music and I’ll instinctually guide you here and there.’ And then I told him, ‘I think you should write big. Think of an orchestra. Make it big. Don’t hold back.’ Because I wanted the music, as you said, to be at times so bombastic it’s out of this world. And it worked really well. I mean, that’s how I’ve worked with Jerskin before. He always composes the music before I start editing. So I can use a library of music that he made for the specific film.”

    “The previous times he had read the script, [so] I thought we should take it a step further and just let him know less this time,” Lanthimos continued. “And I think it worked even better. And he himself says that he wouldn’t have composed this music if he had read the script beforehand. So we’ve figured out this way of working, which is great. I mean, I have all this beautiful music that I can use while editing. We do have to roughly cut it in order to fit the scenes, and then Jerskin goes back and fixes it properly.”

    Bugonia is now available wherever you rent or buy films digitally. It’s one of the best of the year.

    Want more io9 news? Check out when to expect the latest Marvel, Star Wars, and Star Trek releases, what’s next for the DC Universe on film and TV, and everything you need to know about the future of Doctor Who.

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    Germain Lussier

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  • 11 Fantastic Movies From 2025 to Catch Up on This Holiday Season

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    You’re at home with your friends or family. The turkey is gone. The football game is over. The conversation is slowing. What can everyone do to keep the holiday spirit alive? Well, 2025 has been a pretty fantastic year for movies, and many of the best ones released this year are streaming right now in your home. Maybe you should watch one of those.

    But which one? Below, we’ve got 11 suggestions of sci-fi, horror, or fantasy films released this year that we love and maybe you missed. Some you probably didn’t miss. But we’re going under the assumption not everyone has seen everything, so even if you’ve seen something, maybe your brother or sister hasn’t. Here they are, in alphabetical order.

    Bugonia (for rent or purchase)

    Emma Stone and Jesse Plemons star in the latest film from director Yorgos Lanthimos about two men who kidnap a CEO they believe to be an alien. It’s super timely, very mysterious, and incredibly hilarious. Read our review here.

    Elio (on Disney+)

    It was kind of a box office bomb, but Pixar’s latest film, about a young boy who becomes the voice of the entire planet, is wildly exciting and heartwarming. It 100% lives up to its Pixar pedigree. Read our review here.

    Final Destination Bloodlines (on HBO Max)

    Maybe don’t show this one to Grandma and Grandpa, but the latest film in the tense, funny, gory horror series about the inevitability of death is easily the best film in the franchise. A total riot. Read our review here.

    Frankenstein (on Netflix)

    Frankenstein isn’t Guillermo del Toro’s best movie, but it’s the one he’s been building towards his whole life. It’s a sumptuous, emotional, and unforgettable retelling of the classic tale with wonderful performances across the board. Read our review here.

    How to Train Your Dragon (on Peacock)

    The original animated How to Train Your Dragon is one of the best animated films ever. So, that its live-action remake is also very good is no surprise. It’s the exact same movie, just with a whole new look. Read our review here.

    The Life of Chuck (for rent or purchase)

    We adore this movie. It’s not for everyone, and it gets very weird very quickly, but once it clicks and that lightbulb goes off over your head, you’ll never forget it. Mike Flanagan has become the master of Stephen King adaptations, and this wonderful, joyous King adaptation is so different from the rest. Read our review here, and learn more about some spoilers here.

    The Long Walk (for rent or purchase)

    A group of young men compete in a life-changing event where they have to march until only one remains. Based on the Stephen King novel, the film adaptation is shockingly brutal but well worth the trip for the harrowing performances. Read our review here.

    Predator: Killer of Killers (on Hulu)

    Did you see or hear about that awesome Predator movie, Predator: Badlands, that’s now in theaters? Well, its director, Dan Trachtenberg, released another Predator movie earlier this year, and it might be even better. It’s an animated anthology showing Predators fighting humans from across history. It’s phenomenal. Read our review here.

    Sinners (on HBO Max)

    Part music-driven masterpiece, part terrifying horror story, Sinners is unlike anything you’ve ever seen. But, we’ve come to expect that kind of quality and originality from the team of director Ryan Coogler and star Michael B. Jordan. Read our review here.

    Superman (on HBO Max)

    There have been so many iterations of Superman over the years, you could’ve assumed James Gunn’s new film was more of the same. But that’s not the case. Gunn’s film has a palpable joy about it. An optimism and excitement that so many superhero films these days are lacking. This is one you’ll want to watch again and again. Read our review here.

    Weapons (on HBO Max)

    Again, maybe this one isn’t for the more easily scared or grossed-out members of your family, but for others, Weapons is a can’t-miss. A horror mystery about a town that loses a whole classroom of kids is wholly entertaining and unforgettable. And messed up. And scary. And awesome. Read our review here.

    Also…

    If you want to go to theaters, there are also plenty of good movies to see. Yes, everyone might be seeing Wicked: For Good, and you could do that, but we’d suggest Predator: Badlands, Wake Up Dead Man: A Knives Out Mystery, The Running Man, or Zootopia 2 instead.

    Finally, we didn’t want this list to be too long, so if nothing on there interests you, here are a few others that didn’t quite make the cut: Pee Wee as Himself (on HBO Max), Jaws @ 50 (on Hulu or Disney+), 28 Years Later (on Netflix), or Black Phone 2 (for rent or purchase).

    Want more io9 news? Check out when to expect the latest Marvel, Star Wars, and Star Trek releases, what’s next for the DC Universe on film and TV, and everything you need to know about the future of Doctor Who.

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    Germain Lussier

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  • Bugonia Digital, 4K, & Blu-ray Release Dates Set for Emma Stone Movie

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    Universal Pictures Home Entertainment has announced the digital, 4K, and Blu-ray release dates for Bugonia, Focus Features’ newest dark comedy from acclaimed filmmaker Yorgos Lanthimos. The Emma Stone-led movie was based on the South Korean movie Save the Green Planet! from 2003.

    “A wildly entertaining psychological thriller, the film follows two conspiracy-obsessed young men who kidnap a powerful CEO they believe is an alien out to destroy humanity. What begins as a paranoid act spirals into a battle of delusions and control—one as viscerally unpredictable as it is provocative,” reads the movie’s official synopsis.

    When are the digital, 4K, and Blu-ray release dates for Bugonia?

    Bugonia will be available to rent or own on digital platforms starting on November 25, 2025. Afterward, the movie will then be available for purchase on 4K UHD, Blu-ray, and DVD on December 23, 2025. Since its theatrical debut, the film has received positive reviews from critics and audiences alike. It currently holds a Certified Fresh rating of 87% on Rotten Tomatoes, based on 277 reviews.

    Listed below is the bonus featurette included in its home video release:

    • The Birth of the Bees: The Making of Bugonia — Join Emma Stone, Jesse Plemons, and the rest of the cast and crew as they reveal what it takes to bring a Yorgos Lanthimos film to life on screen in all its fascinating, wonderful glory.

    Bugonia was directed by Lanthimos from a screenplay written by Will Tracy, with Midsommar director Ari Aster serving as a producer. The movie also stars Jesse Plemons, Aidan Delbis, Alicia Silverstone, Stavros Halkias, Vanessa Eng, Marc T. Lewis, Momma Cherri, Cedric Dumornay, Parvinder Shergill, and more. The movie was produced by Ed Guiney, Andrew Lowe, Lanthimos, Stone, Lars Knudsen, Miky Lee, and Jerry Kyoungboum Ko. It was a production by CJ ENM, the company behind Bong Joon-ho’s Parasite. 

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    Maggie Dela Paz

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  • Nominations for the 2026 European Film Awards Unveiled

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    The European Film Academy on Tuesday unveiled the nominees for the 2026 European Film Awards (EFA), the top pan-European honor for cinematic excellence.

    In the Best European Feature category, Joachim Trier‘s Norwegian melodrama Sentimental Value, Jafar Panahi‘s Palme d’Or winning Iranian thriller It Was Just an Accident, Olivier Laxe’s post-apocalyptic road movie Sirāt, Mascha Schilinski’s multi-generational German period film Sound of Falling, and Kaouther Ben Hania’s harrowing Gaza drama The Voice of Hind Rajab are contenders for the top prize.

    In the director race, Yorgos Lanthimos is nominated for the Emma Stone/Jessie Plemons starrer Bugonia, alongside Laxe for Sirāt, Panahi for It Was Just an Accident, Schilinski for Sound of Falling and Trier for Sentimental Value.

    Panahi also picked up a best European Screenwriter nomination for the script to It Was Just an Accident. Laxe and Sirāt co-writer Santiago Fillol were nominated in the same category, alongside Schilinksi and co-writer Louise Peter for Sound of Falling; Trier and co-writer Eskil Vogt for Sentimental Value; and Paolo Sorrentino for La Grazia.

    The Best European Actress nominees include Renate Reinsve (Sentimental Value), Leonie Benesch (Late Shift), Valeria Bruni Tedeschi (Duse), Léa Drucker (Case 137), and Vicky Krieps (Love Me Tender). European actor nominees include Sirāt star Sergi López, Mads Mikkelsen for The Last Viking, Toni Servillo for La Grazia, Stellan Skarsgård for Sentimental Value, and Idan Weiss for Franz. Stone and Plemons, as Americas, can’t be nominated for the EFAs.

    Trier’s Sentimental Value has a slight edge in the overall nominations, with 5 noms across the top 5 categories. Laxe’s Sirāt is right behind it with 4 noms, for best feature, director, actor and screenplay, followed by It Was Just an Accident and Sound of Falling, with 3 noms each.

    The European Film Awards group their documentary and animated film nominees into the Best Feature category. Documentary contenders include Afternoons of Solitude, Fiume o Morte!, Riefenstahl, Songs of Slow Burning Earth and With Hasan in Gaza. The 2026 Animated feature nominees are Arco, Dog of God, Little Amelie, Olivia and the Invisible Earthquake and Tales From the Magic Garden.

    In the European Discovery category, honoring up-and-coming young filmmakers, the nominees include Urška Djukić for Little Trouble Girls, Akinola Davies Jr. for My Father’s Shadow, Laura Carreira for On Falling, Murat Fıratoğlu for One of Those Days When Hemme Dies, Mathias Broe for Sauna, and Mara Tamkovich for Under the Grey Sky.

    European Young Audience Award nominees include Bienvenu’s Arco, Nóra Lakos’ I Accidentally Wrote a Book, and Siblings from director Greta Scarano.

    The Academy announced the nominations in front of a live audience at the iconic Real Alcázar palace at the Seville European Film Festival.

    The winners of the 38th European Film Awards will be announced at a gala ceremony in Berlin on Jan. 17, 2026.

    The European Film Awards have traditionally been held at the end of the year, but the Academy has moved the date to mid-January to position the EFAs as part of the international awards season, and as a harbinger for the Baftas and the Oscars. Indeed, many of this year’s EFA nominees, including Sentimental Value, Bugonia, It Was Just an Accident, Sirat, and Sound of Falling, are among the Oscar frontrunners.

    Liv Ullmann, the two-time Oscar-nominated Norwegian actress and director, best known for such 1970s classics as Cries and Whispers, and Scenes From a Marriage, will receive a lifetime achievement honor at this year’s EFAs. Alice Rohrwacher, the Italian director of La Chimera, Futura, and Happy as Lazzaro will be honored with the European Achievement in World Cinema Award.

    See the nominations for the 2026 European Film Awards below.

    EUROPEAN FILM

    Afternoons of Solitude, dir. Albert Serra
    Arco, dir. Ugo Bienvenu
    Dog of God, dir. Raitis Ābele and Lauris Ābele
    Fiume o Morte!, dir. Igor Bezinović
    It Was Just an Accident, dir. Jafar Panahi
    Little Amelie, dir. Maïlys Vallade and Liane-Cho Han
    Olivia and the Invisible Earthquake, dir. Irene Iborra Rizo
    Riefenstahl, dir. Andres Veiel
    Sentimental Value, dir. Joachim Trier
    Sirāt, dir. Oliver Laxe
    Songs of Slow Burning Earth, dir. Olha Zhurba
    Sound of Falling, dir. Mascha Schilinski
    Tales From the Magic Garden, dir. David Súkup, Patrik Pašš, Leon Vidmar and Jean-Claude Rozec
    The Voice of Hind Rajab, dir. Kaouther Ben Hania
    With Hasan in Gaza, dir. Kamal Aljafari

    EUROPEAN DOCUMENTARY

    Afternoons of Solitude, dir. Albert Serra
    Fiume o Morte!, dir. Igor Bezinović
    Riefenstahl, dir. Andres Veiel
    Songs of Slow Burning Earth, dir. Olha Zhurba
    With Hasan in Gaza, dir. Kamal Aljafari

    EUROPEAN ANIMATED FEATURE FILM

    Arco, dir. Ugo Bienvenu
    Dog of God, dir. Raitis Ābele and Lauris Ābele
    Little Amelie, dir. Maïlys Vallade and Liane-Cho Han
    Olivia and the Invisible Earthquake, dir. Irene Iborra Rizo
    Tales From the Magic Garden, dir. David Súkup, Patrik Pašš, Leon Vidmar and Jean-Claude Rozec

    EUROPEAN DIRECTOR

    Yorgos Lanthimos for Bugonia
    Oliver Laxe for Sirāt
    Jafar Panahi for It Was Just an Accident
    Mascha Schilinski for Sound of Falling
    Joachim Trier for Sentimental Value

    EUROPEAN ACTRESS

    Leonie Benesch for Late Shift
    Valeria Bruni Tedeschi for Duse
    Léa Drucker for Case 137
    Vicky Krieps for Love Me Tender
    Renate Reinsve for Sentimental Value

    EUROPEAN ACTOR

    Sergi López for Sirāt
    Mads Mikkelsen for The Last Viking
    Toni Servillo for La Grazia
    Stellan Skarsgård for Sentimental Value
    Idan Weiss for Franz

    EUROPEAN SCREENWRITER

    Santiago Fillol and Oliver Laxe for Sirāt
    Jafar Panahi for It Was Just an Accident
    Mascha Schilinski and Louise Peter for Sound of Falling
    Paolo Sorrentino for La Grazia
    Eskil Vogt and Joachim Trier for Sentimental Value

    EUROPEAN DISCOVERY – PRIX FIPRESCI

    Little Trouble Girls, dir. Urška Djukić
    My Father’s Shadow, dir. Akinola Davies Jr
    On Falling, dir. Laura Carreira
    One of Those Days When Hemme Dies, dir. Murat Fıratoğlu
    Sauna, dir. Mathias Broe
    Under the Grey Sky, dir. Mara Tamkovich

    EUROPEAN YOUNG AUDIENCE AWARD

    Arco, dir. Ugo Bienvenu
    I Accidentally Wrote a Book, dir. Nóra Lakos
    Siblings, dir. Greta Scarano

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    Scott Roxborough

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  • Dakota Johnson Teases Yorgos Lanthimos to Pause the Emma Stone Team-Ups and Work With Her: “Are You Aware That There Are Other Actresses?”

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    Dakota Johnson tried out a new side gig on Friday night, serving as moderator for a Bugonia conversation with Emma Stone, Jesse Plemons and director Yorgos Lanthimos — while also teasingly suggesting herself for the filmmaker’s next project.

    Johnson said she had seen Bugonia — which follows two conspiracy-obsessed men who kidnap a major CEO when they become convinced that she’s an alien who wants to destroy Earth — twice in the past 24 hours, but repeatedly told the crowd that she was “the wrong person” to be moderating. “This is not going to be a good interview. I just want you guys to be aware I’m not good at this. I don’t know why I was asked but here we are,” she said to laughs.

    As Johnson weeded through questions on her phone, she brought up the fact that this is Lanthimos’ fourth film with Stone, following The Favourite, Poor Things and Kinds of Kindness. “Are you aware that there are other actresses, that are really talented, maybe even very close by?” she joked, as Stone chimed in, “What! No, right?,” while looking at the filmmaker. She turned back to Johnson and said, “No, go for it, do your pitch, work on your pitch.” The Materialists star admitted, “I already did and it didn’t work, remember? You were there,” as Stone laughed.

    Johnson also praised Stone for shaving her head for the film and noted how she is covered in skin cream or blood for the majority of the movie. “Who on Earth looks so beautiful with a shaved head covered in blood?” she mused, while Stone joked back, “You’re flirting.”

    Plemons also spoke about his own hair journey, as he wore extensions to play his conspiracy theorist character. “Hair was a big thing, the losing of the hair and then the gaining of the hair — there was a while there where when I first got any extensions in, I would come up to Yorgos and was maybe like experimenting with some of the physicality and every time he would see me, he would just laugh,” the actor remembered. “I was like, I don’t know if this is good?”

    Later in the chat, Stone commented on the film’s big twist ending, noting how “I had never played a character that I thought about the audience seeing it for the second time before. Would it still make sense? Would it be able to track through if you were watching the film again, knowing what you know — like I did after reading the script for the first time — and have more to give or be interesting in some way? I don’t know that that was effective, but it was a really fun challenge.”

    Johnson closed out the conversation by declaring, “I regret doing this. I’ll never do it again. [Stone] warned me, but I had said yes already. Is there anything you guys would like to say before this terrible interview is over?”

    Plemons insisted, “It really hasn’t been that bad,” as Lanthimos teased, “I think you’re the third best moderator that we’ve had,” on a night when they were doing several chats. Johnson replied, “That’s huge. I’ll come on the road.”

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    Kirsten Chuba

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  • ‘Bugonia’: Cinematographer Robbie Ryan on Embracing VistaVision Chaos

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    Cinematographer Robbie Ryan’s collaboration with Yorgos Lanthimos has always been defined by technical daring and dark humor, and “Bugonia” is no exception. In their latest project — a surreal sci-fi tale “about bees and a basement,” as Ryan recalls — the pair leaned into both analog imperfection and formal precision to create a visual world that feels unsettlingly alive.

    That sense of unease extends to the story itself: “Bugonia” buzzes with eerie tension as Michelle (Emma Stone), a sharp-tongued pharma CEO, is kidnapped by Teddy (Jesse Plemons) and his cousin Don (Aidan Delbis), who demand she confess to being an alien. Held captive in a shadowy basement, Michelle’s ordeal blurs the line between paranoia and revelation on Teddy’s remote ranch, where his hive of bees becomes a haunting metaphor for control.

    From the start, Ryan and Lanthimos were determined to push the boundaries of large-format film. They chose to shoot “Bugonia” on VistaVision cameras — specifically the Wilcam W11 and the Beaucam — using prototype lenses developed by Dan Sasaki, nicknamed “GW lenses” after the late cinematographer, Gordon Willis. The combination produced extraordinary resolution and texture, but also a fair share of headaches. “The camera pushes the film horizontally through the gate instead of vertically,” Ryan explained, “so you get brand new problems that I didn’t know existed, which is camera jams. We ended up using it in the film. It’s interesting looking.”

    Lanthimos’ signature low-angle framing returns here, grounding the film in a subtly distorted perspective that keeps viewers off balance. Speaking with Variety, for Inside the Frame, Ryan said, “If there’s ever a shot at normal height.” He added, “He’ll say, ‘What’s this all about? This is horrible.’” Movement, too, is meticulously choreographed: “Yorgos’ approach to filmmaking is if somebody’s moving, the camera should be moving; if they stop, you stop. The timing is very precise.”

    One of the film’s standout moments — the early kidnapping sequence — captures that precision and playfulness. Shot over the first days of production, the scene was rigged with cameras on the bonnet of a G-Wagon, capturing chaos as Emma Stone’s character fights back against her would-be captors. Despite a few technical hiccups (“the speed bumps made [the camera] shake and jam”), the sequence embodies Lanthimos’ blend of absurdity and tension. Ryan describes it as “observational,” filmed mostly in wide shots that let the awkward clumsiness of the attack play out in real time.

    Lighting, as usual for Lanthimos, leaned heavily toward the natural. “He tends not to want film lighting if he can get away with it,” Ryan said, admitting he snuck in a small light for one car shot out of fear that the reflections would obscure Stone’s face. “He probably would’ve given out to me for that,” he added with a grin.

    Perhaps the most striking shot in the kidnapping scene, filmed through the glass of Stone’s character’s modern home and across her indoor pool, was born from improvisation. A crane setup intended for a cut scene became a new vantage point.

    “Yorgos just said, ‘Why don’t we try the attack from inside over the pool?’” Ryan recalled. The result is a quietly surreal image that encapsulates the film’s tone: brutal yet darkly funny.

    In “Bugonia,” the imperfections of vintage cameras, the precision of Lanthimos’ direction, and Ryan’s instinct for how the camera should move fuse into something wholly unique. “Anytime I work with Yorgos,” Ryan reflected, “I feel like an audience member. I never know what’s coming next.”

    Watch the video above.

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    Tiana DeNicola

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  • Bugonia Movie Review: A Paranoid Fable for The Conspiracy Age | Filmfare.com

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    Yorgos Lanthimos’ Bugonia is a film that exists somewhere between satire, science fiction, and psychological thriller and true to the Greek auteur’s temperament, it refuses to pick a lane. The director, known for his surreal dissections of human behaviour in The Favourite and Poor Things, reimagines the 2003 South Korean cult classic Save the Green Planet! for a modern audience. The result is a film that is both audacious and uneven, equal parts allegory and absurdity.

    The story follows two disillusioned men, Teddy Gatz (Jesse Plemons) and Don (Aidan Delbis), his neurodivergent cousin, convinced that a powerful pharmaceutical CEO, Michelle Fuller, played by Emma Stone, is, in fact, an alien orchestrating humanity’s demise. Acting on their paranoid conviction, they abduct her and hold her captive in a basement, hoping to extract a confession that could “save the planet.” What follows is a strange, often disturbing tug of war between delusion and truth, power and helplessness, rendered with Lanthimos’ signature blend of deadpan humour and unnerving precision.

    The director has worked once again with long-time collaborator, cinematographer Robbie Ryan, who has used wide-angle lenses, one-point perspectives and exaggerated depth of field to create a world that feels both clinical and grotesque. The film is shot in VistaVision, giving its carefully composed frames a heightened sense of visual distortion. Every space seems too bright, every face too close, every pause too long. It’s a movie built on discomfort, using form as a mirror to its fractured themes.

    At the heart of this disorienting narrative are two magnetic performances. Emma Stone, continuing her fruitful collaboration with Lanthimos, turns the cool composure of a corporate titan into something eerie and unreadable. Her role demands restraint and ambiguity and she excels on all fronts. Another Oscar nomination seems to be on her way. Whether she’s a manipulative CEO or an extraterrestrial predator is never entirely clear and that’s exactly the point.

    Opposite her, Jesse Plemons delivers a career-best performance as the unhinged beekeeper-turned-conspiracy theorist. He embodies his character’s paranoia with terrifying sincerity, balancing absurd humour with deep tragedy. Plemons steals the show, grounding the film’s surreal energy in something painfully recognisable, the modern paranoia that fuels online misinformation and distrust. Aidan Delbis is himself autistic and hence his act rings with lived-in truth.

    Thematically, Bugonia dives into various terrains: environmental collapse, corporate greed, and the seductive logic of conspiracy theories. It’s a film about power structures and the fragile human need to find meaning in chaos. In that sense, it feels eerily reflective of our own moment, where truth has become a matter of belief and belief a weapon of survival. Lanthimos doesn’t spoon-feed his audience answers but crafts a cinematic space where absurdity feels like the only rational response to the world.

    Yet for all its ambition, Bugonia is not without flaws. The middle act, dominated by the hostage scenario, begins to drag under the weight of its own repetition. The tonal shifts from farce to horror to philosophical reflection can feel jarring, even indulgent. The film raises questions about faith, power and truth, but leaves them suspended, unresolved, perhaps intentionally so.

    Ultimately, Bugonia is a film that dares you to either engage or walk away. It’s not meant for those seeking tidy endings, straight narratives or moral clarity. But for viewers willing to surrender to Lanthimos’ warped worldview, it offers a biting, funny, and often haunting reflection of contemporary anxieties. Like the best of his work, it finds beauty in the bizarre and discomfort in the familiar.

    In the end, Bugonia may not convert anyone who isn’t already in Lanthimos’ corner. But for those attuned to his peculiar rhythm, it stands as another fascinating, if imperfect, entry in a filmography obsessed with human delusion and the strange, buzzing noise it makes when confronted with the truth. Just like the much-loved bees, so central to the film. The end will shock you for sure. But the absurdity of the human condition, even in its collapse, will bring a smile as well. Are we really needed in this world to keep? Wouldn’t it fare better without us? Such questions will haunt you for sure, much after the end credits roll away.

    Also Read: Upcoming Hollywood Releases This October: Tron Ares, Bugonia & More

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    Devesh Sharma

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  • ‘Save the Green Planet’ Is the Manic, Conspiratorial Acid Trip ‘Bugonia’ Only Hinted at Being

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    When the director of the modern weird, Yorgos Lanthimos, teamed up with frequent collaborator and muse Emma Stone on their wild, conspiratorial environmental-extraterrestrial film, Bugonia, they drew inspiration from a little-known source: a 2003 Korean film called Save the Green Planet. If you walked away from Lanthimos’ deliciously odd and of-the-moment movie, wondering if it could’ve stood to be even more bizarre, its progenitor is definitely worth checking out.

    Directed by Jang Joon-hwan, Save the Green Planet’s premise, which writer Will Tracy adapted for Bugonia, closely informs its Western remake. That said, unlike Bugonia, which lets you coast in cold on the promise that Lanthimos and Stone are cooking up another slow-burn oddity, Save the Green Planet doesn’t wait to get weird. It does it from frame one.

    It frontloads its madness, declaring its brand of environmentalism to be less Greta Thunberg and more Giorgio Tsoukalos, driven by a dead-serious belief in ancient aliens from Andromeda. It centers on Lee Byeong-gu (Shin Ha-kyun), a young man who abducts Kang Man-shik (Baek Yoon-sik), a top Korean executive, believing he’s part of an insidious alien reptilian invasion trying to take over Earth while operating under the guise of the pharmaceutical industry.

    Like any fringe conspiracy theory, the story soon escalates; Byeong-gu conducts grueling experiments on Man-shik in his secluded basement torture chamber/film studio and tries to extract a confession out of the exec.

    Given Bugonia’s conceit as a remake of Save the Green Planet, it almost goes without saying that there are small, apparent differences between the two films. Instead of Bugonia‘s bumbling pseudo-manipulative brother duo of the redpilled Teddy (Jesse Plemons) and bright-eyed and loyal-to-a-fault Don (Aidan Delbis), who threaten to force the truth out of Stone’s Amazon-esque executive Michelle Fuller, Byeong-gu works hand-in-hand with his girlfriend, the charming, spacey Su-ni (Hwang Jeong-min). They’re unified in their effort to extract a confession from Man-shik, whom they believe is intergalactic royalty, by any means necessary.

    © CJ Entertainment

    Other notable differences include the fact that Bugonia‘s scene-stealing cop, Stavros Halkias’ Casey, is mainly there for Nathan Fielder-coded awkward conversational laughs, while Save the Green Planet has a more developed B-plot with seasoned Detective Choo (Lee Jae-yong) and green Detective Kim (Lee Joo-hyun) as they track Byeong-gu and piece together the deep-seated psychological motivations behind his fringe machinations.

    Lanthimos’ Bugonia is delightfully chaotic, dry-humored, and utterly captivating—especially with wide shots letting Plemons and Stone chew the scenery—but it left me with the nagging feeling that it could’ve been even weirder on the whole. It was plenty bizarre from start to finish, with an almost blank check assurance that whether Teddy’s conspiracy proved true or false, an explosively entertaining climax was guaranteed. Still, it elicited more reactionary “aha!” laughs rather than “oh wtf” mouth-agape smirks and raised-eyebrow gawking at the weirdness it committed to celluloid. Save the Green Planet delivers that exact brand of strangeness in excess.

    Save The Green Planet 3
    © CJ Entertainment

    Despite its wild tone, whipping between intense Korean dramas like Kim Jee-won’s I Saw the Devil and the darkly comedic yet ultra-violent style of Takashi Miike’s Ichi the Killer, Jang keeps his conspiratorial, manic thriller dream afloat without seeming tonally dissonant. If anything, the film reveals layers like an infinite matryoshka doll, with more spectacle and suspense to show in spades, in tandem with its gruesome, Saw-like traps. The director’s erratic, experimental, and expressive handheld camerawork and naturalistic framing create a kind of visual synesthesia—blurring mood and meaning to create some of the wildest swings between slapstick absurdity and gut-punch drama ever committed to celluloid.

    Save The Green Planet 5
    © CJ Entertainment

    One of my favorite scenes is Byeong-gu’s full-blown Telltale Heart spiral, where he scrambles to hide the still-breathing evidence of his botched abduction. The undercover inspector drops by for a casual drink and chat about aliens, unknowingly leaning against the very CCTV broadcasting Man-shik—crucified in the basement dungeon, clear as day. Meanwhile, Man-shik’s hand creeps out from a hidden latch, clawing desperately at the inspector’s boot, only for Byeong-gu to stomp it down mid-sentence, all while trying to pass as a normal guy who isn’t sweating bullets at all over his destiny as humanity’s savior, having his DIY makeshift toilet Andromedan torture device unearthed.

    Interwoven with this comedy of errors, Su-ni’s on some random bullshit, dressing up her Barbie doll while monitoring Man-shik, or walking a tightrope between his torture sessions and bathroom breaks. Either that or you’re witnessing Byeong-gu’s delusions—daydreaming himself as a kung fu hero with all the wire-performing skill of Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon as he pirouettes through the air and high-kicks his meth dealer. The film plays like a lucid acid trip where dreams and reality, revelation and hallucination, teeter with each subsequent scene. All the while, the film refuses to reveal which is which.

    Save the Green Planet feels less cynical than its 2025 remake and also more sincere, even as it oscillates between overt goofiness and oppressively serious tones. Bugonia plays like a prescient black comedy that both sides its way through modern paranoia—laughing equally at the 4Chan-adjacent, QAnon-flavored conspiracists and the woke-pandering corporate execs who speak in syrupy platitudes about inclusivity while quietly wringing every last drop of labor from their workers before clock-out (making sure never to explicitly call it overtime). The satire lands easier on the fringe weirdos, who’ve long been the internet’s favorite punching bag, while the executive class gets the safer treatment: flanderized, ironic, and meta-commentary-lite.

    Lanthimos’ version lets the shoe drop either way, leaving you satisfied whether the corporation is alien or not. You even feel a flicker of sympathy for Stone’s Michelle Fuller—her emotionally violent corpo-speak is so gently antagonistic it feels more like a parody of culture than a critique of character. For American audiences, Bugonia is a laugh at the corrosive ideological split of Teddy: the radical environmentalist who lost the forest for the trees to the echo-chambered conspiracist who, perhaps, never saw the forest to begin with.

    Save the Green Planet, by contrast, doesn’t just gesture at corporate evil—it goes all-in on it. Despite Byeong-gui’s absurdity, you can’t help but root for him. Teddy’s chaotic misadventures, meanwhile, feel more like a car crash waiting to happen, keeping you on the edge of your seat to see how much worse his misadventurous situation can get.

    Western remakes often carry the burden of standing on the shoulders of giants, especially amid the steady outpouring of adaptations from Asian cinema. As Quentin Tarantino once riffed, “Great artists steal. They don’t do homages,” noting that he steals from every single movie ever made. The same argument can be made for Western remakes, which Bugonia now joins in the ranks of with frequent homage-payer Spike Lee’s Highest 2 Lowest—a skinnier example of a remake that, despite Denzel Washington’s star power, can’t quite go toe-to-toe with Akira Kurosawa’s original. Some remakes simply don’t have arms long enough to box in the same weight class as the source.

    Pointing this out isn’t a dig at Bugonia or other remakesit’s to trace how directors like Lee and Lanthimos zero in on a single thread of the original and amplify it to fit their own cinematic musings, whether it’s AI dread in the arts, conspiracy spirals, or the slow rot of corporate doublespeak to iron them over.

    These films stand shoulder to shoulder with other 2025 anxiety-laden time capsules like Ari Aster’s Eddington and Paul Thomas Anderson’s One Battle After Another—works steeped in the paranoia of being terminally online, politically scrambled, and spiritually exhausted. Jang did the same with Save the Green Planet, but louder and weirder, for 2003’s anxieties and his own ethos. And he did so by stealing explicitly.

    Jang mines the internet for wild celebrity sex-alien rumors and spoofs 2001: A Space Odyssey‘s apes and obelisk. More pointedly, he flips Misery‘s dynamic, asking what his chimera of a story might look like from the abductor’s point of view. It’s less plot theft and more joy theft, if there ever was a term. A kind of genre larceny that Lanthimos channels too, less brazenly but just as intentionally in Bugonia. It’s a quality that makes both films different enough to walk away with entirely different takeaways despite, ultimately, being the same story.

    Want more io9 news? Check out when to expect the latest Marvel, Star Wars, and Star Trek releases, what’s next for the DC Universe on film and TV, and everything you need to know about the future of Doctor Who.

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    Isaiah Colbert

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  • Emma Stone Explains Why She Kept Her Bugonia Look a Secret

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    For her upcoming sci-fi comedy Bugonia, Emma Stone shaved her head. Directed by Yorgos Lanthimos, the film follows the kidnapping of Stone’s character, Michelle Fuller, the CEO of a major pharmaceutical company. In a recent interview, Stone explained why she chose to keep her bald look for the film a secret.

    Emma Stone says she kept her Bugonia look hidden to surprise viewers

    Emma Stone recently revealed the reason behind keeping her Bugonia bald look a secret. In an interview with People, Stone explained how she wanted it to come to viewers as a surprise. As she expressed her true feelings about not liking to wear beanies during the time, Stone said, “Because one of the great things that happened with Poor Things was nobody had seen pictures of Bella’s look, that really long black hair. It was fun when the trailer came out for that, and it was like, ‘Whoa.’ It’s nice when it’s revealed later.”

    Wanting the same reaction this time, Stone chose to keep her bald look hidden. When she learned that there were no pictures or candids from the set, she says she thought, “Why not keep this up for a little bit?” Additionally, during a Q&A event on September 3, Stone opened up about her initial thoughts on having to shave her head. “From the moment I read the script, I knew I’d have to shave my head, because there was just never going to be any other way,” she said at the NYC session.

    Lanthimos then added, “You did have cold feet once.” Responding to this, Stone began to explain the moment she had to shave her head. “They were setting up four cameras, because we had to get it in one shot,” she explained. She then described how the special VistaVision cameras take some time to set up, and as she waited, she got cold feet. Then, after explaining how recalling her mother’s chemotherapy treatment helped her, she said, “So it was actually one of the greatest experiences of my life, very freeing, and it’s just hair. I thought it would be longer by now, but it’s just hair!”

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    Elton Fernandes

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  • Not Everyone at the All-Bald ‘Bugonia’ Screening Had to Go Bald

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    Fans who attended a recent screening of the new film Bugonia got both good news and bad news. The good news? Bugonia is legitimately awesome, and surely, they enjoyed the wild ride. The bad news? They probably could’ve left with their hair.

    Earlier this week, Focus Features held a clever marketing screening for the new Yorgos Lanthimos film, where you got in for free if you were previously bald or willing to go bald. The reason is that, in the film, Jesse Plemons’ character kidnaps Emma Stone’s character and shaves her head so she can’t communicate with her alien overlords. Oh, right, he thinks she’s an alien, which is the whole fun of the movie.

    Focus even had a barber on hand to shave anyone willing to clear their domes before the movie, and many did. But not everyone.

    Writer Demi Adejuyigbe was among the first to go to social media to reveal that what started as an all-bald screening quickly pivoted. “Friend’s boyfriend is at the all-bald screening of BUGONIA and apparently shaving heads took too long so they’re passing out bald caps. Imagine being the last one who had to shave,” Adejuyigbe posted.

    Popular California meme account Americana at Brand also posted about the event and, as people pointed out, you can see people in bald caps in the image.

    So what happened here? Did the shaving just take too much time? Could people simply choose to put on the bald cap instead of shaving? io9 reached out to representatives handling the film as well as Focus Features but did not get a response.

    Nevertheless, it seems most people didn’t mind. The Los Angeles Times was also at the event, and in the following video, you can see that a lot of shaving did, in fact, take place. And while the video also confirms the availability of bald caps, people still seem to be generally happy about the event anyway.

    @latimes

    How committed to the bit are you? @rebecca stopped by a free special advanced screening of Yorgos Lanthimos’ new film, “Bugonia.” Attendees had to be bald, “or willing to become bald” with the help of an on-site barber.

    ♬ original sound – The Los Angeles Times

    You have to think anyone who willingly attended the screening was ready to play along, but, as Adejuyigbe pointed out, there was probably one person who got their head shaved, then realized they didn’t have to, and maybe that person didn’t feel so great. But, thankfully, Bugonia is awesome, so at least they got to see it for free.

    Bugonia opens in limited release on Friday before expanding on October 31. We’ll have a review and interview with director Yorgos Lanthimos later this week.

    Want more io9 news? Check out when to expect the latest Marvel, Star Wars, and Star Trek releases, what’s next for the DC Universe on film and TV, and everything you need to know about the future of Doctor Who.

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  • Wanna See ‘Bugonia’ Early? Go Bald!

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    There was a gimmicky movie screening to see The Long Walkand now the upcoming Bugonia is doing one of its own.

    Anyone living in LA who wants to see Yorgos Lanthimos’ absurdist comedy before everyone else can do so on Monday, October 20 at the Culver Theater at 8 PM. Tickets are free, but there’s a catch: the screening’s for “anyone who is bald, or willing to become bald”—so if you wanna get into the first-come, first-serve screening, you gotta be bald to get in. Show up with hair, and there’ll be an on-site barber starting at 6 PM who you’ll have to let chop it all off to get in. Things don’t stop there: Focus is going to film some of the screening and use it for promotional purposes, similar to commercials for horror movies.

    Based on the South Korean film Save the Green Planet!, Bugonia stars Emma Stone as Michelle, a pharmaceutical CEO kidnapped by Teddy (Jesse Plemons) and Don (Aidan Delbis). Conspiracy-pilled as hell, the two have it in their heads that Michelle’s actually an alien who’s come to destroy Earth and while they’ve got her captive, shave her head so she can’t contact her ship. (No, really.) Stone genuinely went bald for the role and if it helps, she called it pretty great back in August to not have her hair.

    For everyone else, you can see Bugonia with your hair intact when it hits theaters Friday, October 24.

    Want more io9 news? Check out when to expect the latest Marvel, Star Wars, and Star Trek releases, what’s next for the DC Universe on film and TV, and everything you need to know about the future of Doctor Who.

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  • Yorgos Lanthimos Jokes He Needs an AI Avatar to Get Out of Promoting His Films: “Do I Have to Say the Same Thing a Thousand Times?”

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    Yorgos Lanthimos might be on board with AI, after all.

    The Oscar-nominated filmmaker, director of movies The Favourite, Poor Things and Kinds of Kindness, jokingly told BFI London Film Festival attendees on Saturday that he’s willing to send out a computer-generated avatar of himself if it helps him get out of promotional duties.

    Lanthimos spoke with Succession creator Jesse Armstrong the day after the U.K. premiere of his latest thriller, Bugonia, starring Emma Stone as a powerful CEO who is kidnapped by two conspiracy-obsessed men, played by Jesse Plemons and Aidan Delbis, convinced she is an alien about to destroy Earth.

    “I have mixed feelings about… figuring out what the best way to do it is, because [producers] spend a lot of money and they do have to make it back,” Lanthimos began when asked if he cares about the commercial success of his features. “It’s not my passion to go around being photographed and tell people stuff. It’s almost the same amount of time as making a film — you spend four to six months filming, six months editing and then you have, like, six months going around promoting the film.”

    He continued about the repetitive nature of a film’s press run: “Isn’t there another way? You sit down with your people and they say, [You need to do] this interview, this interview. Can’t you just take out some of them? Do I have to do all of them and say the same thing a thousand times? By the middle of the day, I won’t remember the things I’ve said. I’m looking at people like, ‘Did I tell you this?’” It’s a big part of it, I understand… But especially now with technology, you capture something and everyone has it! Why do I have to do it a million times?”

    As audience members erupted with laughter, the director joked, “I mean, AI… I’ll make an avatar and send it out. That sounds really opposite to my beliefs [about AI]!”

    Armstrong quipped back: “First you want a dictatorship and now you want an AI version of yourself to talk about your films.” The award-winning Brit writer was referring to earlier in the session when Lanthimos told Armstrong he believes the world needs a benevolent dictator to combat the far-right dominating the world’s current political landscape. “The way things are going, [we have] ones that are doing the bad things, but [we need] a dictator who does good things for the people.”

    Lanthimos clarified: “Because it seems like, whatever you call it, maybe the left, they haven’t found a way to do this. You need someone who will take responsibility and go: ‘We’re going to do the good things.’”

    Across the session, the men covered a myriad of topics including how Lanthimos made films in the wake of the 2008 financial crash — which hit Lanthimos’ native Greece particularly hard — and finding creative freedom in moving to the U.K. to make English-language films.

    Stone, in particular, is already garnering more awards buzz for Bugonia only two years after her Oscar win for Poor Things.

    The BFI London Film Festival 2025 runs Oct. 8-19.

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  • A New ‘Bugonia’ Trailer Leans Heavy Into That Alien Question

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    It was last summer when Focus Features announced Bugonia, the latest film from director Yorgos Lanthimos. That alone is enough to get anyone excited, as Lanthimos has long established himself as a filmmaker whose work you turn up to, no matter what. But then, the film had this tagline, and instantly, we were hooked: “Two conspiracy-obsessed young men kidnap the high-powered CEO of a major company, convinced that she is an alien intent on destroying planet Earth.” Yes, please, and thank you.

    Written by Will Tracy, based on a 2003 South Korean film called Save the Green Planet, Bugonia stars Emma Stone as the CEO and Jesse Plemons and Aidan Delbis as the conspiracy nuts. It opens in limited release on October 24 before expanding wide on October 31. And while we’ve seen several trailers so far, as well as some mostly stellar reviews, this latest one leans heavily into that wildly intriguing question. Is Emma Stone an alien?

    We love the repetition in this trailer, as well as the catchy Chappell Roan beats, which were also used in the previous one. But it’s that ending, where Plemons forces Stone to say the words that he wants to hear, that really gets us. It not only speaks to the mystery of the film, but it also speaks to life as we know it these days. A world where people believe what they want to believe, no matter what, and live to be validated, even if it’s not true. Does Plemons even care if she’s actually an alien? Or does he just want her to say it?

    You have to think that’s one of the big reasons Lanthimos wants to tackle this subject. This idea, which originated over 20 years ago, feels as pertinent now as ever. Then you throw a two-time Oscar winner into the lead role, opposite an actor who is sure to have an Oscar before long, and you’ve really got something cooking.

    Tickets for Bugonia are on sale now. Are you going to be checking it out?

    Want more io9 news? Check out when to expect the latest Marvel, Star Wars, and Star Trek releases, what’s next for the DC Universe on film and TV, and everything you need to know about the future of Doctor Who.

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    Germain Lussier

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  • Telluride Awards Analysis: ‘Hamnet,’ ‘Sentimental Value’ Join ‘Sinners’ Atop List of Oscar Frontrunners

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    The 52nd Telluride Film Festival is now in the books. Margot Robbie, Ryan Coogler, Oprah Winfrey, David Oyelowo, Rian Johnson, Janet Yang, Kathy Kennedy and Frank Marshall were among those who came just to watch movies. Screenings were introduced with a group meditation (Chloé Zhao), a song (Jesse Plemons) and a wave (man of few words Bruce Springsteen). Adam Sandler and Emma Stone posed for photos in the streets with ecstatic local schoolkids. And the Oscar race came into clearer focus.

    Below, you can read my biggest awards-related takeaways from the fest.

    Four high-profile films that already have U.S. distribution had their world premieres in Telluride: Ballad of a Small Player (Netflix), Bugonia (Focus), Hamnet (Focus) and Springsteen: Deliver Me from Nowhere (20th Century). How did they go over?

    Focus has plenty of cause for celebration, as both Bugonia and Hamnet played like gangbusters and look almost certain to land Oscar noms for best picture and plenty else.

    Zhao’s Hamnet, an adaptation of Maggie O’Farrell’s best-selling 2020 novel of the same name, which centers on the Shakespeare family and its tragic loss that allegedly inspired the play Hamlet, garnered rave reviews (it’s at 100 percent on Rotten Tomatoes and 95 percent on Metacritic), including particularly strong notices for leading lady Jessie Buckley, who plays William’s wife Agnes. Some are already proclaiming it to be the best picture Oscar frontrunner. I certainly think it will be a big factor in the season. I would just caution that numerous Academy members quietly expressed to me their feeling that the film has tonal issues — some called it “trauma porn” — and that it has been so hyped by critics that other Academy members will inevitably feel disappointed when they catch up with it. We’ll see.

    As for Bugonia, which reunites filmmaker Yorgos Lanthimos and actress/producer Stone in a dark comedy about people who “do their own research,” reactions have been nearly as enthusiastic. It played, for me, like a high-end Black Mirror episode — I mean that as a major compliment — and it also has been likened to a prior off-the-wall Lanthimos/Stone collab, Poor Things. Like that 2023 film, it could land multiple acting noms (Stone and Plemons are great), if less recognition for below-the-line work.

    Scott Cooper’s Springsteen, meanwhile, is not what a lot of people expected it to be — a jukebox musical in the vein of Bohemian Rhapsody, Rocketman or Elvis — but rather an examination of the causes and effects of a deep depression that engulfed The Boss (The Bear’s Jeremy Allen White) in the early 1980s and resulted in his iconoclastic 1982 album Nebraska. It remains to be seen if/how that will impact the film’s box office appeal, but reviews have been solid, and White and Jeremy Strong, who plays Springsteen’s manager, stand a real shot at lead and supporting actor Oscar noms, respectively.

    Then there’s Edward Berger’s Ballad of a Small Player, which comes a year after Conclave and three years after All Quiet on the Western Front, Berger films that were of a large scale and about matters of social import (and landed a bunch of Oscar noms, including best picture). Ballad is neither of those things — it’s about a gambling addict in present-day Macao who grows increasingly desperate as his luck runs out — and the no-holds-barred performance of its lead actor, Colin Farrell, is its best bet for a nom.

    Of films that came directly from world premiering in Venice to make their North American debut in the Rockies, did anything pop?

    Yes, La Grazia (Mubi) and Jay Kelly (Netflix). And it was striking to me how differently people reacted to those two films in Telluride versus in Venice.

    Ironically, La Grazia, the Italian film that opened both fests, was far better received in America. The seventh collab between filmmaker Paolo Sorrentino and actor Toni Servillo, it centers on an Italian president during the last six months of his term. (Maybe Americans were just happy to be reminded that dignified leaders still exist?) I suspect that Italy will eventually submit it for the best international feature Oscar, as it previously did two other Sorrentino films, 2013’s The Great Beauty (which won) and 2022’s The Hand of God, and also that Servillo could make a run at a long-overdue first Oscar nom.

    A similar thing happened with Noah Baumbach’s Jay Kelly, a film about a movie star (George Clooney) who experiences an existential crisis that forces him and his “team” to question their life choices. It was written off on the Lido, but rebounded in a major way — along with its Rotten Tomatoes score — in Telluride, where Baumbach was fêted with a career tribute, Billy Crudup’s big scene received mid-movie applause at each screening, Adam Sandler cemented his status as a frontrunner for the best supporting actor Oscar, and Clooney, who was absent due to illness, was talked up by his collaborators. I think the film is tailor-made for the Academy.

    The reverse sort of happened with Oscar winner Guillermo del Toro’s Frankenstein, which played through the roof in Venice — it got a 14-minute standing ovation — and then came to Telluride as a surprise late-night screening, and engendered a more muted response. It’s certainly well made, with a knockout score by the great Alexandre Desplat that the Academy’s music branch will surely nominate. But, even given how much people love del Toro, I think that the film’s bloated story and runtime (two-and-a-half hours, versus 70 minutes for the 1931 original) will make it hard for it to crack the top Oscar categories.

    What about films from earlier fests, including Sundance, Berlin and Cannes?

    In Telluride, as far as I could discern, only one film accumulated as many hardcore fans as Hamnet, and that was the Norwegian dramedy Sentimental Value (Neon), which reunites Oscar nominee The Worst Person in the World’s filmmaker Joachim Trier and actress Renate Reinsve, and which won Cannes’ Grand Prix (second-place award). Festival attendees ate it up, to the extent that I think it deserves to be grouped with Coogler’s Sinners (Warner Bros.) and Hamnet in the top tier of best picture contenders.

    Like Jay Kelly, Sentimental Value is about a filmmaker who neglected his family in order to focus on his career — a character played by the veteran Swedish thespian Stellan Skarsgård, who will probably duke it out with Sandler for the best supporting actor Oscar. Unlike Jay Kelly, Sentimental Value also devotes a significant amount of attention to the filmmaker’s children, played by Reinsve (who I see as neck and neck with Buckley for best actress at the moment) and Inga Ibsdotter Lilleaas. Elle Fanning also stars.

    Neon also had two other films — both political thrillers — that were celebrated at Cannes and then proved popular in Telluride, as well.

    Iranian dissident Jafar Panahi’s It Was Just an Accident, which underscores how the brutality of Iran’s current regime haunts the republic’s citizens, won Cannes’ Palme d’Or over Sentimental Value, and was widely admired here as well. (Panahi, visiting the U.S. for the first time in nearly 20 years, enlisted the audience at one screening to join him in recording a video singing “Happy Birthday” to his script consultant, Mehdi Mahmoudian, who is currently incarcerated in Iran, as Panahi himself was until recently.) Obviously, Iran will not submit It Was Just an Accident for the best international feature Oscar, but France, from which the film drew much of its financing, might. More on that in a moment.

    People also couldn’t stop raving about Wagner Moura, the Brazilian best known for TV’s Narcos, who was awarded Cannes’ best actor prize for his tour-de-force turn in Kleber Mendonça Filho’s The Secret Agent. Moura should not be underestimated in the best actor Oscar race, and Brazil, which won best international feature last year with I’m Still Here, might well make another run for it with this smart and funny epic.

    The film that is probably an even bet with It Was Just an Accident to be the French entry is Nouvelle Vague (Netflix), Richard Linklater’s black-and-white homage to the French New Wave. Cineastes loved it in Cannes — I was shocked that it wasn’t awarded a single prize there — and again in Telluride, ahead of which I discussed it with Linklater.

    Other titles that came to Telluride and held their own, even if they didn’t set the world on fire, were, via Cannes, The History of Sound (A24), The Mastermind (Mubi), A Private Life (Sony Classics), Pillion (A24) and Urchin (1-2 Special); via Berlin, Blue Moon (Sony Classics); and via Sundance, If I Had Legs I’d Kick You (A24).

    What about the sales titles?

    THR exclusively broke the news of the two deals that have come out of the fest thus far: Netflix bought Oscar nominee Joshua Seftel’s All the Empty Rooms, a powerful doc short about an effort to memorialize children killed in school shootings; and Amazon/MGM nabbed Oscar winner Morgan Neville’s energizing doc feature about Paul McCartney’s post-Beatles life, Man on the Run.

    Of the films that are still on the table, I’ve heard a lot of enthusiasm for Tuner, the narrative directorial debut of Navalny Oscar winner Daniel Roher, which stars Leo Woodall and Dustin Hoffman; one Academy member even likened it to Whiplash. Hamlet, Aneil Karia‘s reimagining of the Shakespeare play in present-day London, is all about Riz Ahmed’s compelling performance as the title character, and will probably find a buyer. And Philippa Lowthorpe’s H Is for Hawk features a committed turn by the great Claire Foy as a falconer, but is way too long at 130 minutes; I suspect that any potential partner will insist on tightening it up.

    Among the distributorless documentaries that played at the fest, the most talked about was surely Ivy Meeropol’s Ask E. Jean, a portrait of the former advice columnist E. Jean Carroll, who accused President Donald Trump of sexual assault and twice won legal judgments against him — but is any potential distributor willing to risk the wrath of Trump? I hope and suspect so.

    Mark Obenhaus and Citizenfour Oscar winner Laura PoitrasCover-Up profiles another muckraker, Seymour Hersh, and won a lot of admirers both in Venice, where it debuted, and in Telluride. I heard a lot of chatter about The White Helmets Oscar winner Orlando von Einsiedel’s tearjerker The Cycle of Love. And if the turnout of doc branch Academy members at screenings of Robb MossThe Bend in the River is any indication, it, too, will soon find a home.

    The bottom line

    Much of the awards-industrial complex, including yours truly, has just returned home from Telluride, and is laying low today and tomorrow before decamping to Canada for the 50th Toronto International Film Festival on Thursday. There, many titles that played in Telluride will resurface. A few that debuted in Venice but then skipped Telluride will have their North American premieres, including The Smashing Machine (A24) and The Testament of Ann Lee (still seeking U.S. distribution). And most excitingly, the Canadians will host the world premieres of a bunch of potential awards contenders, including Rental Family (Searchlight), The Lost Bus (Apple), Hedda (Amazon/MGM), Wake Up Dead Man: A Knives Out Mystery (Netflix), Roofman (Paramount) and Christy (still seeking U.S. distribution).

    There are 194 days, or six months and 13 days, between now and the 98th Academy Awards on Sunday, March 15, 2026. A lot can still happen. Stay tuned.

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    Scott Feinberg

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  • Emma Stone is right, aliens are out there | The Mary Sue

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    emma stone at venice

    People have one of two thoughts about life on other planets: Obviously there are aliens out there or it is just us. Which feels like a drastic divide and…well, it is. But it is interesting to see where certain people fall.

    Wherever you fall on the spectrum is your own purgative but I personally think it is more fun to think that there is other life out there and they’re all watching us like “these fools!” You know who also thinks life exists elsewhere? Emma Stone. The star of Poor Things is at the Venice Film Festival. She is promoting her new film from Yorgos Lanthimos and during the press conference revealed where she lands on this topic.

    “Yes, I’m coming out and saying it,” Stone told reporters at the press conference for her film Bugonia. “I believe in aliens!” And the reason behind this belief isn’t really that surprising. She started to listen to astronomer Carl Sagan and the rest is kind of history.

    “One of my favorite people who has ever lived is [astronomer] Carl Sagan and I fell madly in love with his philosophy, science and how brilliant he is,” Stone told the room. “He very deeply believed the idea that we’re alone in this vast expansive universe, not that we’re being watched, is a pretty narcissistic thing.”

    In the midst of Stone talking about the reality that aliens are out there, we also got a trailer for her new film. And look, the idea that she is an alien in the movie makes me believe that she really DOES know something about what is out in those stars. Ma’am, who have you met? What in the Fox Mulder is going on?

    You can see a fellow believer that the truth is out there in Bugonia later this year.

    (featured image: Aldara Zarraoa/Getty Images)

    Have a tip we should know? [email protected]

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    Rachel Leishman

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    Rachel Leishman (She/Her) is an Assistant Editor at the Mary Sue. She’s been a writer professionally since 2016 but was always obsessed with movies and television and writing about them growing up. A lover of Spider-Man and Wanda Maximoff’s biggest defender, she has interests in all things nerdy and a cat named Benjamin Wyatt the cat. If you want to talk classic rock music or all things Harrison Ford, she’s your girl but her interests span far and wide. Yes, she knows she looks like Florence Pugh. She has multiple podcasts, normally has opinions on any bit of pop culture, and can tell you can actors entire filmography off the top of her head. Her current obsession is Glen Powell’s dog, Brisket.

    Her work at the Mary Sue often includes Star Wars, Marvel, DC, movie reviews, and interviews.

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  • With Bugonia, Yorgos Lanthimos Enters the Real World, Sort Of

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    Yorgos Lanthimos’s Bugonia began life as a remake of the 2003 South Korean film Save the Green Planet!, and it retains the broad outlines of that strange classic. But it also feels like Lanthimos through and through, albeit with the strangest of twists: It’s the first picture of his populated by characters who feel like they exist in the real world, people you could run into if you walked out the door. The power of Lanthimos’s work has always come from his ability to provide surreal but dead-on metaphors that take on lives of their own: a futuristic resort where one must debase oneself to find a mate, in The Lobster; or a family where the parents have trained their kids to accept absurdities as reality, in Dogtooth. With Bugonia, it feels like he’s entered our world at last, at least for a while. Which also makes it maybe the saddest film he’s ever made.

    Bugonia, which premieres at the Venice Film Festival and will release in theaters in October, is basically a two-hander, albeit with three central characters. Teddy (Jesse Plemons) and his neurodivergent cousin Donald (played by newcomer Aiden Delbis) live in a ramshackle house in the woods where they keep bees and are methodically preparing for a shocking act: They will kidnap high-powered, slick-suited pharmaceutical-company executive Michelle (Emma Stone) and hold her hostage until she confesses that she’s an alien who has been sent to experiment on humans. “Welcome to the headquarters of the human resistance,” they declare after shaving her head and taking off her blindfold. Teddy wants Michelle to contact her mothership and take them to her queen, with whom he intends to negotiate for the aliens’ withdrawal from Earth.

    Teddy has done his research. He’s studied all the YouTube videos and photos and he’s gathered all the necessary information, and he knows exactly what these aliens are and what their ships look like; the good-natured though not entirely convinced Donald goes along with him out of loyalty and love, and also because Teddy seems like the one person who treats him as an equal. Michelle, meanwhile, is at a loss to how to react: She’s a tough, wealthy power player, the kind of person who does martial arts in the morning and doesn’t take any shit from anyone. And she has no idea how she’s going to convince these kooks to let her go.

    Lanthimos has guided multiple actors, including these, to some of the best performances of their careers (Stone won an Oscar for 2023’s Poor Things, and Plemons won the Best Actor award at Cannes for Kinds of Kindness last year), so it seems weird to say that Bugonia is also his first film to feel like a true showcase for his stars. But it is: The movie unfolds as a series of confrontations between Teddy and Michelle, her increasingly insistent desperation crashing against the rocks of his languorous immovability. Stone is remarkable (when is she not?), emotionally wriggling like a bug pinned to a wall, trying different tactics with this psycho. First, she’s calm and controlled and confident; then, she tries kindness and pliancy. Plemons’s laid-back confidence is bone-chilling initially. But he also has to fuel our ire, earn our pathos, and maybe even provoke some twinges of solidarity. The characters in Lanthimos’s films don’t really go on traditional emotional journeys. We, the audience, do.

    The director’s work has always turned on humiliation and power trips. (Think of The Favourite and how beyond all its ornate rituals and ironclad hierarchies, the line between power and disgrace remained so tenuous.) Bugonia is no different. If what Teddy is saying is true, Michelle would be a more powerful being than he could ever dream of. And yet, he needs it to be true. He needs to explain his own powerlessness, even as he seemingly holds her life in his hands. If she is, in fact, an emissary from an alien race, then the degradations of his life will finally make sense. “We are not steering the ship, Don,” he tells his cousin. “They are.” It’s hard not to sense the slightest bit of hope amid all that outrage.

    Gradually, we learn what lies at the root of all this. Surreal flashbacks show us how Teddy’s ill mom (Alicia Silverstone) suffered at the hands of Michelle’s company, how the empty corporate platitudes offered in exchange for his family’s horror merely confirmed his belief that there was more to what was being said and what had been done. Bugonia’s narrative trajectory is, on one level, a predictable but resonant one, as we slowly learn to accept Teddy’s irrational actions as a response to a fundamentally irrational world. But we also see that the only thing that will lead to resolution and a way out of this mess is, well, more humiliation.

    So, that describes most of the movie. Bugonia heads in, let’s say, a different direction as it reaches its conclusion. (If you’ve seen Save the Green Planet!, you’ll know where it’s going.) While these developments aren’t exactly new or shocking — some viewers will probably find them predictable — they actually bring the world of this film further into Lanthimos-land. His style is Olympian on the surface, the ironic detachment of his pictures casting a cold, curious eye at humanity’s follies and derangements. But this coolness is a ruse, and he always lets the sadness peek through, making it clear that he is, after all, one of us. By the time Bugonia is over, with a series of beautiful and haunting images that seem to come out of nowhere, we understand that beneath its bemused dispassion lies a deep longing for connection. Early in the film, Teddy looks at his dying bees and sees similarities with humanity: “A dead colony atomized in a trillion directions with no way home again.” By the end, it’s clear the director has seen the same thing.

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    Bilge Ebiri

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