Monday, November 10, 2025

November Movies Part 1: Dead of Winter, Bugonia, Frankenstein

Alright, the theaters and streaming services are filling up with new movies and I'm on a quest to watch them all. Ready to join me?!

Dead of Winter:
Written by Nicholas Jacobson-Larson and Dalton Leeb and directed by Brian Kirk, this is an icy and compelling story about Barb, a widow in Minnesota (played by Emma Thompson, doing her best Marge Gunderson impression) who is travelling to a remote lake in the middle of a snowstorm. Along the way, she stumbles across a kidnapping and now must attempt to rescue the young woman who has been kidnapped. And of course, she has no cell service and there aren't any people around, so she's going to have to get creative.

I would watch anything Thompson is in, and she unsurprisingly delivers a powerhouse performance as this innovative and courageous woman. Throughout the film we also get flashbacks of her younger self falling in love with her husband and the two of them building their life together, which makes for a very bittersweet narrative. I won't go into much more detail about the kidnapping, but let's just say that this film also stars Judy Greer in a particularly villainous turn, which is finally an appropriate use of Judy Greer as a proper co-star in a movie, and not just playing a supportive best friend or weepy mom. This is a taut, spare, and thrilling movie, with many compelling twists and turns, and it's the perfect treat if you're looking for more women-centered pictures that pack a bit of a punch.

Bugonia:
Written by Will Tracy (who based it on a Korean movie by Jang Joon-hwan named Save the Green Planet!) and directed by Yorgos Lanthimos, this is a wonderfully weird and creepy movie about a man named Teddy (Jesse Plemons), who convinces his cousin Don (Aidan Delbis) to help him kidnap Michelle Fuller (Emma Stone), the wealthy CEO of a pharmaceutical company. Why is he kidnapping her? Because he is certain that she is actually an Andromedan, an alien masquerading as a human who is manipulating the entire human race to do the bidding of her alien race and consequently ruining human existence.

The premise may be absurd, but oh boy, none of the sentiment will feel out of the ordinary to you. This movie hits deep about how people get radicalized on the Internet, delving deep into conspiracy theories, and then attack the powerful in a bid to right socioeconomic wrongs. Stone delivers a brilliant performance here, initially thoroughly confused by these wild accusations, then attempting to placate this troubled man, and finally calling the shots and masterfully manipulating him in a desperate bid to escape. The movie mostly consists of Plemons and Stone talking at each other and it's an acting masterclass that crawls under your skin and leaves you wanting more. Of course, this is still a movie directed by Yorgos Lanthimos, so if this is your first time watching his work, please expect it to take some...unexpected turns. This movie further confirms that I prefer his work when he's a director but not the writer, because as weird as this movie might be, it's not as weird as it would be if Lanthimos were penning the script himself. And that's really saying something.

Frankenstein:
Written and directed by Guillermo del Toro, this is a faithful adaptation of Mary Shelley's novel, with Oscar Isaac playing the titular doctor, and an unrecognizable Jacob Elordi playing his creation. Many years ago, I watched the National Theater's production of Frankenstein with Benedict Cumberbatch and Jonny Lee Miller alternating the roles of Frankenstein and the Creature on different nights, and this movie felt very similar to that stage play. Except, of course, it is so much more epic in its vast scope and cinematography. Production designer Tamara Deverell and costume designer Kate Hawley had better be getting nominations on Oscar night, if not outright taking the statuettes home, because this is one of the most stunning movies I have seen in a long time. The gothic vibe reminded me a great deal of Crimson Peak, another drop-dead gorgeous del Toro movie, starring a different woman named Mia (in this movie, Mia Goth plays Elizabeth, the unfortunate woman who is going to get tangled up in Frankenstein's machinations).

This movie is two and half hours long and your mileage may vary if you are expecting something innovative story-wise. Del Toro is not interested in any reinterpretations or twists here - this is a classic story and he's going to tell it classically. I, for one, was completely on board from start to finish. Elordi delivers an incredible physical performance as the Creature initially stumbles into life and then has to contend with the fact that he might never die. Isaac is perfect as the crazed doctor, obsessed with proving his brilliance but lacking any ounce of empathy to actually do any good once he brings his Creature to life. And Mia Goth is a classic gothic heroine, virginal but intelligent and fascinated by the Creature, and bringing a little lust into the proceedings. But the British accents by all these non-British actors are a little iffy, so be warned if that's a pet peeve. Otherwise, no notes. I think Mary Shelley would be proud.

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