Luca Guadagnino's After the Hunt Skewers #MeToo Moral Posing
A feisty, cancel-culture provocation that isn't willing to commit.

Luca Guadagnino's After the Hunt is a talky stew of post-#MeToo provocation. It's maddening, devilish, caustic, and occasionally quite funny in its shotgun-like satire of campus sex-and-status politics. The movie's strength lies in what it refuses to say, what it refuses to commit to, what it refuses to make easy—and its weaknesses lie in those same qualities.
Is this a critique of #MeToo, a schematically oblique both-sides cop-out, or something darker and more devious? The answer is yes. That's about the only answer the movie provides.
The setup is simple enough. At Yale University, Hank, a white, middle-aged male professor, is accused of sexual assault by Maggie, a Black, queer Ph.D. student. The details of the alleged assault are left unclear, but you can imagine he might have done it: he's arrogant, flirtatious, and he drinks too much. But he says the student is merely reacting to the fact that he confronted her about plagiarizing her dissertation. You can imagine, too, that this could be true: She responds to slightly out-of-bounds conversations with just-so politically correct comebacks. And when asked about her area of study, she has nothing of substance to say.
In the middle of all this is an older professor, on the cusp of making tenure, named Alma, played by Julia Roberts. Like Hank and Maggie, Alma is a philosopher—someone who studies the nature of ethics, virtue, and morality. And she is trapped in a moral quandary of her own: Maggie, an acolyte, first alleges the assault to her. But Alma is close with Hank, and Hank, insisting on his innocence, wants her to take his side.
Alma's decision is complicated by her own circumstances. She lives a well-to-do intellectual life in a catalog-worthy apartment with Frederick, her psychiatrist husband. Their picture-perfect marriage is more complicated than it seems, and the timing of Maggie's accusation complicates Alma's own tenuous standing in the department. What will she do?
One way to look at the movie is as a sneering satire of woke campus nonsense at the height of #MeToo. One of the film's producers, Brian Grazer, a longtime Democratic donor who voted for Donald Trump, has hinted that he sees it that way, telling The Hollywood Reporter, "Before this project existed, I was very much in the anti-woke category—it just got too extreme. And this movie shows the damage of that by dealing with false accusations on the Yale campus." To be clear, the movie never firmly establishes that Maggie's central allegations are false. But with its smirking sensibility and its diatribes against rich Ivy League students, it's easy enough to read the film as an anti-woke satire.
But you can just as easily read it as something grander and darker—a story about an elite system that is fundamentally broken, that elevates damaged people, and that selects primarily for individuals who are crafty in pursuing their own self-interest while pretending to be moral exemplars. Alma and Hank are philosophy professors; Maggie studies virtue ethics. The chairman of the department at one point speaks of how he has become an expert in symbolic public communication rather than substantive academic rigor. He displays a bottle of pricey but notoriously peaty, aggressive Laphroaig Scotch on a liquor cart to show he has elite taste—but what he really likes to drink is basic Jameson. The point is that nobody actually likes the elite stuff. They pretend to for status.
That's probably the strongest reading of the film. It depicts the ivory tower, and by implication elite spaces everywhere, as a mirror world of empty status signaling—in which no one really likes what they're doing, and no substantive intellectual work is being performed.
At its best, it captures the sheer, exhausting emptiness of elite status battles. But the movie's big idea is that in the ridiculous, self-serious elite status competitions that defined the woke era, there were no ideas—no concepts of morality, justice, or decency—no philosophies to speak of. Just defensive jargon and self-preserving chess moves by privileged, useless people seeking to preserve their useless privilege. The movie sometimes seems designed to prove its point by provoking those same people, by prodding them into a reaction that makes the case for it. Like I said: it's a provocation.
In that sense, it's frequently effective, with a serrated wit that provokes an evil chuckle or a knowing smirk. But its prodding and poking of cultural hot buttons can only go so far: What it doesn't provoke much of is genuine thought.
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#MeToo kind of ended when serial groper and child kisser Joe Biden (D) became potus from mystery votes “cast” by the MeToo crowd. Per Biden’s daughter's diary, the creeper showered with her. And his assistant manager blowjobbed her way to that position.
How boring.
I used to enjoy going to a theater complex and picking a movie more or less by posters or at random. Saw a lot of turkeys which were mostly still entertaining.
Got tired of theaters. The sticky floors were tolerable. The clowns talking on their phones or what they planned for dinner were not.
Got tired of streaming. Too damn many platforms, and I sure wasn't going to subscribe to them all. Amazon started throwing in ads; I skeddadled away from them. Netflix stopped shipping DVDs and streaming old movies, and the new movies were way too woke to tolerate picking new movies at random. Dropped them.
Maybe this movie is a sign Hollywood is beginning to awake from woke. I won't hold my breath. Amazon still throws in ads, won't let me cancel the video portion of Prime member$hip, and has made it explicit that I don't own kindle eBooks.
Movies since 2015 suck. Yes, yes, there has been the occasional good movie. I can count the number of post 2015 movies I've seen that were good on maybe one hand. But that's pushing ten years of cinema. When I started noticing this a couple of years ago, I'd scroll through Amazon or HBO Max, read the synopsis, look at the characters and I'd be swiping saying, "Yeah, no...no, blows, not interested, sounds awful, looks contrived, woke, woke, woke, woke, woke, woke, girl-boss horseshit, body positivity, woke, woke, woke, nope, boring, Oh, great, another show in 19th century England where the Police constable is a black lesbian with a side-shave and a nose piercing... nope, woke, skip, no chance, nuh uh... ooh, wait, THIS looks interesting: released 2014. Huh.
Trying to find something to watch with the Mrs on Prime or the plethora of HBO/Max/Starz channels in our YouTubeTV subscription is largely a waste of time..."You have reached the end of the internet..."
Personally, I'm happy watching any D-grade claptrap "horror" movies that pop up, so if I'm looking for something to watch alone, I can usually find something.
We cut the DirecTV cord a few months ago after having been customers for 35 years or so. Got YouTubeTV pretty much only to have ESPN and other sports channels not available a la carte. Since then, I find I have the TV turned off more and more often, preferring to listen to radio (even with commercials!) as my "background noise". Almost all the shows I used to record have ended anyway.
Perhaps you should consider hoisting the jolly roger?
The obvious libertarian answer is to enjoy both Laphroaig and Jameson. I'm not making a Whisky Sour with Laphroaig, that would be stupid.
I don't know if it's heartening or disheartening to think even the virtue signalers are sick of their performative (and supposed) virtue.
Given the passive-aggressive, non-committal plot themes I'd go with disheartening.
But you can just as easily read it as something grander and darker—a story about an elite system that is fundamentally broken, that elevates damaged people, and that selects primarily for individuals who are crafty in pursuing their own self-interest while pretending to be moral exemplars.
*looks around*
So... a satire against woke, sneering elite campus culture.
I think Suderman thinks that his 'but on the other hand' is producing a different interpretation of the movie's central message, but is essentially underlining the first interpretation while using different foot notes.
*thinks*
One interpretation is it's an anti-woke satire. The second interpretation is it's an anti-woke satire, but using carefully chosen words that don't make you look like a Republican.
IMO, Suderman can cram his combination of "skewers moral posing" and "its strength and weakness lies in what it doesn't say" up his Jazz Hole.
It sounds like a "both kinds, left and center-left", "passive progressive", "skewered, but not enough to get uninvited to cocktail parties", piece.
"What it doesn't provoke much of is genuine thought."
If I wanted to think, I'd read a book. Give me an old-time action movie which lets me turn my brain off.
But perhaps I need not worry - what, realistically, are the chances that a modern movie might force me to think?