Nia DaCosta brings a feverish intensity to her adaptation of Ibsen's classic play, Hedda Gabler, infusing the 1950s English countryside with an exotic sensuality reminiscent of Downton Abbey. The result is a surreal, sometimes baffling melodrama that revels in its own absurdities.
Tessa Thompson shines as Hedda, a free-spirited seductress who has married well to live a life of luxury, but harbors secrets and desires that threaten to upend her stifling existence. Her character is the catalyst for a wild, Dionysian party that descends into chaos, fueled by Hedda's manipulative nature.
Supporting Thompson is an excellent cast, including Kathryn Hunter as Bertie, a tart-tongued Mrs. Patmore-like figure who pours scorn on her employers with authenticity. Tom Bateman plays George Tesman, Hedda's milquetoast husband, whose academic ambitions are threatened by his own financial woes.
The arrival of Nina Hoss's Eileen Lövborg, Hedda's former lover and a brilliant classicist seeking the same professorship, sets off a chain reaction of events that blur the lines between seduction, desire, and violence. The film's exploration of racial difference and prejudice is explicit and thought-provoking, but its tone veers wildly from Hopper-esque excess to Ibsen-esque tragic intensity.
DaCosta's vision for Hedda Gabler is a true original, one that defies easy categorization or summary. It's a movie that demands to be indulged, with its outlandish set pieces, decadent parties, and morally ambiguous characters. Love it or hate it, this adaptation of Ibsen's classic play is sure to leave you talking long after the curtain falls.
Tessa Thompson shines as Hedda, a free-spirited seductress who has married well to live a life of luxury, but harbors secrets and desires that threaten to upend her stifling existence. Her character is the catalyst for a wild, Dionysian party that descends into chaos, fueled by Hedda's manipulative nature.
Supporting Thompson is an excellent cast, including Kathryn Hunter as Bertie, a tart-tongued Mrs. Patmore-like figure who pours scorn on her employers with authenticity. Tom Bateman plays George Tesman, Hedda's milquetoast husband, whose academic ambitions are threatened by his own financial woes.
The arrival of Nina Hoss's Eileen Lövborg, Hedda's former lover and a brilliant classicist seeking the same professorship, sets off a chain reaction of events that blur the lines between seduction, desire, and violence. The film's exploration of racial difference and prejudice is explicit and thought-provoking, but its tone veers wildly from Hopper-esque excess to Ibsen-esque tragic intensity.
DaCosta's vision for Hedda Gabler is a true original, one that defies easy categorization or summary. It's a movie that demands to be indulged, with its outlandish set pieces, decadent parties, and morally ambiguous characters. Love it or hate it, this adaptation of Ibsen's classic play is sure to leave you talking long after the curtain falls.