Review: Eddington Takes on the Chaotic 2020 Politics of COVID
The first half of the film comes off as libertarian but then it takes a weird turn.
There's never been a movie quite like Eddington. This latest offering from the independent film studio A24 is ripped from the headlines of summer 2020, when the dual crises of the COVID-19 pandemic and the George Floyd protests slammed a very anxious America.
Eddington's first half adopts the disguise—a face mask, perhaps—of very recent historical fiction: Joe Cross (Joaquin Phoenix) is a small-town New Mexico sheriff in a standoff with Mayor Ted Garcia (Pedro Pascal) over statewide coronavirus mandates. Cross is a right-wing guy living with his nutty mother-in-law and even nuttier wife, clearly influenced by their conspiracy theorizing.
The sheriff's initial acts of resistance against government health mandates are cast in a sympathetic light; Cross is not a caricature, and his well-founded dislike of mask mandates imbues the film's first act with a libertarian flavor. Eddington's skewering of performative wokeness is similarly effective: The anti-racism protesters are portrayed as misguided, clout-chasing buffoons. Halfway in, many viewers will wonder if they are watching the most right-wing major film since The Dark Knight Rises.
Then Eddington takes a very unexpected turn, veering into a territory that borders horror and science fiction. It's clearly a deliberate choice; one surmises that writer-director Ari Aster intended to capture the collective feelings of confusion, anger, and paranoia that overtook America in 2020, bottle them up, shake furiously, and see what happens. The result is a delirious, head-scratching final sequence that is so incomprehensible it's borderline offensive. You've had fever dreams that make more sense than this.
If that was Aster's point—that there's no use looking for logic in a world driven mad by plague, resentment, and tyranny—then Eddington deserves acclaim. But like the era it covers, you'll be in no hurry to experience it again.
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Why. The. Fuck. Is. Pedro. Pascal. In. Everything?
He's not interesting. He's not all that compelling. He's decidedly meh.
I am boycotting anything he appears in just on principle.
Came here just to say this.
Motherfucker couldn't even shave his faggot mustache to play Reed Richards.
Was recently watching my parents’ wedding film and dammit, Michael Caine was in it!
Classic Miller!
Coupled with the fact that no one is going to the movies. Everything is bombing.
Maybe he works cheap?
This is off topic, but, Robbie. I tried to watch your show on the Hill this week. Would you please tell that woman to shut the hell up and quit talking over you . Thanks
How you acted during covid is who you really are.
COVID as Rorschach test. Brilliant analogy, obvious as soon as I read it. It really did expose the loons. Had neighbors who were terrified of it, used hand sanitizer on their mail, everything they brought home from the grocery (well, probably not fruit and veggies).
"How you acted during covid is who you really are."
I kept working, found some really cool robot masks to wear, got fat, played a ton of video games, remodeled the bathroom, bought land, bought Bitcoin.
So yeah, it tracks.
The first half of the film comes off as libertarian but then it takes a weird turn.
Kind of like reading Reason. At first, they're warning about the dangers of tariffs, then suddenly they're celebrating taxing cars to reduce traffic, or wiping their brow that the temporary federal slowdown in homelessness spending doesn't amount to that big a percentage.
I usually have three views on most political and legal events: my fantasy Chartertopia near-anarchy, the real world we live in, and trying to imagine plausible and possible fixes to this fucked-up system we have. Reason seems to have forgotten libertarianism and individualism entirely. Very few mentions of personal responsibility, or any accountability for government stooges. I welcome ideas for trying to fix out current rotten system, but when that's all they have, and when they so often involve just shifting taxes around or editing regulations in some frivolous manner, they have become part of the establishment.
Fire KMW and Welch.
Get out of DC and NYC.
Include libertarian content in every article.
or editing regulations in some frivolous manner,
Due processez!
And it's hilarious and you can't figure out where it's going — or maybe even where it's been!
I was unlucky enough to live in a county that shut down everything for a long time. However I was lucky enough to live next to a neighboring county where the sheriff told the state health nazis to fk off. I spent the entire covid era going to the bars and restaurants in the neighboring country unmasked the entire time. Did my grocery shopping while I was there. Truly thankful for the small handful of true Americans left.
I don't know where you live, but I did visit Coeur D'alene, Idaho during peak COVID. Coming from Seattle, I kind of felt like my Grandfather looked when he took his first trip outside the Iron curtain in the early 1980s.
...
Not just one! It keeps taking unexpected turns. Just the kind of movie I like, and that fortunately they've been making some of lately.