With Eddington, Hollywood Finally Starts To Reckon With the Madness of 2020
Ari Aster’s pandemic satire is the movie of the year.
With Trump in office again and a nebulous vibe shift or two fully underway, 2025 sometimes felt more like an aftershock of 2020—a remake or a sequel or some sort of twisted spiritual successor—than its own distinctive year.
Nearly every significant debate in politics and culture, from the woke wars to the streaming wars to the actual wars, can be traced back to that seminal pandemic year, the annus horribilis that tore America, along with much of the rest of the world, apart.
And no movie better captured the anxieties and agitations of that year than Eddington, Ari Aster's manic satire of COVID-era madness and the damage it did to our national psyche. I saw dozens of new films in 2025, but this is the one I thought about most, because it's the first Hollywood film, and maybe the first mass-cultural product that isn't a podcast or an essay, that really reckoned with what happened in 2020. The pandemic made us paranoid. COVID made us crazy. Tech became even more of an all-purpose mediator for human relationships. And years later, when it was all over, everything was weirder and more insane than ever.
Eddington dramatizes the way in which COVID caused a kind of mass psychotic break from reality, a cultural cabin fever from which we are all still recovering. It's the movie of the year, and maybe of this whole cursed decade.
Part of the movie's appeal is that it starts with something simple and familiar: a debate about masking that pits haughty rulemakers against ordinary folks. Set in small town New Mexico in the summer of 2020, the film begins as a mild satire of COVID pieties, but quickly raises the stakes. The masking debate somehow merges with debates about crypto, social media, and Black Lives Matter, as a small town election between an incumbent mayor and an anti-masking sheriff takes on increasingly absurd dynamics. Yet the rapid ratcheting up of cultural-political stakes mirrors the real-world escalations of that year, in which politics and the culture war seemed to merge into a giant, ugly blob of undifferentiated anger and polarization, a vortex of political-cultural hysteria that overwhelmed society. There were a lot of specific gripes and complaints, but often it seemed that the real issue was that everyone was mad about everything.
The escalation continues in familiar ways until the final third of the film, which devolves into a fever dream of chaos and violence, the culture war as actual war, playing out on the streets of an ordinary American town. It's a farce, both terrifying and hilarious. And like all good farces, it makes its point through exaggeration.
In its final act, Eddington seems to go off the rails. It becomes bizarre, violent, impossible to reason with or fully understand, a deranged, hallucinatory experience that seems wholly disconnected from on-the-ground reality. What starts as pointed pandemic satire turns into something insane, something that cannot possibly be meant to reflect what's real.
That's the point. The movie's argument, to the extent that it can be boiled down, is that the pandemic year, and all the social upheaval it wrought, can't be understood on normal, grounded, realistic terms. What Aster seems to be saying is that 2020 is the year we all went crazy. And the only way to truly look back on that moment is as a kind of collective madness, an era that couldn't possibly have happened. And yet, somehow, it did.
Editor's Note: As of February 29, 2024, commenting privileges on reason.com posts are limited to Reason Plus subscribers. Past commenters are grandfathered in for a temporary period. Subscribe here to preserve your ability to comment. Your Reason Plus subscription also gives you an ad-free version of reason.com, along with full access to the digital edition and archives of Reason magazine. We request that comments be civil and on-topic. We do not moderate or assume any responsibility for comments, which are owned by the readers who post them. Comments do not represent the views of reason.com or Reason Foundation. We reserve the right to delete any comment and ban commenters for any reason at any time. Comments may only be edited within 5 minutes of posting. Report abuses.
Please to post comments
With Eddington, Hollywood Finally Starts To Reckon With the Madness of 2020
...
The movie's argument, to the extent that it can be boiled down, is that the pandemic year, and all the social upheaval it wrought, can't be understood on normal, grounded, realistic terms.
I don't think you know what the word 'reckon' means.
a cultural cabin fever
Holy shit! GFY and the movie you rode in on.
Concidering you liked preditor badlands I have to disregard all of you movie articles
Does Hollywood still make movies? I'd forgotten it existed.
Hollywood movies are too shit to pirate
Do two hour Soviet-style propaganda videos count as movies?
I liked it very much, but not as much as I did _Weapons_ .
The escalation continues in familiar ways until the final third of the film, which devolves into a fever dream of chaos and violence...
That third act basically undoes anything the first two seemed to be trying to accomplish. I suppose the only way for a movie not starring Kelsey Grammer to be made giving an honest critique of the subject matter it would necessarily have to be diluted with so much extra that people forget their 2020 behavior was being spotlit.
I like Grammer's portrayal of Dr. Hank McCoy as much as the next guy but let's not delude ourselves into thinking Ms. Marvel wasn't a diluted mess.
Nobody takes movies seriously anymore, do they?
'Nearly every significant debate in politics and culture, from the woke wars to the streaming wars to the actual wars, can be traced back to that seminal pandemic year, the annus horribilis that tore America, along with much of the rest of the world, apart.'
You mean the year that our entrenched establishment decided that they would do anything and everything to defeat Literally Hitler?
Seriously, if you don't view our COVID response through this lens, you are, um, an idiot.
Suderman view movies from the lense of a child that eats paste
Urban Left: "See we all went a little crazy, he-heh, here's a movie about it."
Everyone Else: "Well not all of us."
Urban Left: "YES, all of us, we ALL went a little crazy, so no one is to blame - right?"
Everyone Else: "Just hurry up and finish making my coffee order."
“a cultural cabin fever from which we are all still recovering.”
Nope. I fully recovered as soon as the government stopped forcing me to carry around my talisman to keep me safe from tigers. Oops, I meant keep me safe from bears in trunks.
I'm not prepared to listen to "Hollywood" tell me a motherfucking thing about 2020 until people are held accountable for double-digit children deaths in unnecessary vaccine tests
>>a cultural cabin fever from which we are all still recovering
clearly you were not in Texas.