logo
‘Materialists' Review: Dakota Johnson Measures Value Of Love Between Chris Evans And Pedro Pascal in Celine Song's Sublime Romcomdram

‘Materialists' Review: Dakota Johnson Measures Value Of Love Between Chris Evans And Pedro Pascal in Celine Song's Sublime Romcomdram

Yahooa day ago

Watching writer-director Celine Song's follow-up to her feature debut, indie darling and 2023 Best Picture Oscar nominee Past Lives, all sorts of supposed cinematic influences ran through my mind from Billy Wilder's The Apartment to James L. Brooks' Broadcast News to Mike Nichols' Working Girl and just about anything from Nora Ephron. I left the screening thinking I had just seen the best movie about the search for love in many years.
Call it a romcom, call it a romdram or any shorthand attempt to categorize it, but this is a movie that defies that kind of easy description. But on its surface, Materialists easily recalls so many Hollywood confections where the girl is torn between two guys vying for her eternal love. In this case, though, it is a lot more complicated for Lucy, a character perfectly matched with a never-better Dakota Johnson, who, as a matchmaker in a high-end New York City agency called Adore, has a great track record for hooking up others but not herself. Fast-food TV matchmaking The Bachelor this is not.
More from Deadline
Chris Evans On 'Avengers: Doomsday': "It's Sad To Not Be Back With The Band"
'How To Train Your Dragon' Won't Be Laggin' At Summer Box Office With $175M-$185M Global Start For Live-Action Redo - Preview
'Eddington' Trailer: Joaquin Phoenix Gets Into Standoff With Pedro Pascal In A24's Covid-Era Western From Filmmaker Ari Aster
Song actually worked as a matchmaker when she was a struggling NY playwright, and clearly that was the inspiration, or kernel of an idea, to follow up such a widely praised feature debut as Past Lives which in its own unique way has its lead female caught up in a different way between two men and two times of life. It too defied easy definition and, coupled with Materialists, confirms Song one of the most exciting new filmmaking voices of her generation.
So Lucy makes about $80,000 a year trying to find perfect matches for high-end clients with a checklist of wants in finding the ideal partner. Vignettes with some of them are hilarious, both for men who want to stop at age 29 as consideration for a match or women with their own quirky needs. In this world, love is a negotiation, and in Lucy's mind — personally and professionally — money is a big part of the attraction. This goes back to her own experience as we see in a quick flashback to the fifth-anniversary date with her boyfriend John (Chris Evans). Both were struggling actors when they met, John had no money, a beat-up car and lived with two obnoxious roommates. On this anniversary date, we see it all blow up as Lucy finally realizes she is sick of being poor, or at least with John. They break up, time passes, and now at the wedding of one of her successful matches, Lucy is a guest and runs into John working with the catering company. We can still see sparks, but it is clearly over.
At the same nuptials she meets Harry (Pedro Pascal), brother of the groom, who looks like he has just come out of Central Casting. He's a rich, successful commodities broker living in a $12 million penthouse, suave, charming, handsome — you name it. She calls these 'perfect' guys unicorns, and does not try to pick him up for herself but instead as a potential date and a surefire winner for any number of her female clients.
It turns out, and yes in classic romcom fashion, Harry has no interest in them, only in Lucy, and this does lead to the matchmaker checking off her own list and doing something rather unprofessional by caving to Harry's advances. But will it become true love or just another negotiation, one that Harry is just as comfortable entering into as Lucy thinks she is? Meanwhile, John comes in and out of the picture, reminding us he is the one who still loves Lucy for who she was, even if she doesn't quite know now who she is.
Song has cast her three leads to perfection. Johnson nails all the insecurity beneath the surface of this seemingly assured businesswoman and is superb in what might be her best screen outing yet. Evans, always a better actor than he is given credit for, doesn't miss a beat as a guy still struggling as an actor and as a man trying to find his true love, and knowing he probably already did – the one that got away. Pascal, in a role that could have been one-dimensional, gives Harry genuine humanity and likability. This is someone we also can root for, and in a key scene where he reveals his surprising vulnerability (it has to do with a kind of plastic surgery I never knew existed), he is heartbreakingly real.
The standout among the supporting cast is Zoe Winters, an Adore client who first gets rejected by a match she was willing to settle for and then, in highly dramatic fashion, as the victim of sexual assault by another match set up by Lucy, who understandably is devastated when she learns of the disastrous date she felt responsible for. This sequence goes into much darker territory than any in the genre usually do, but it also feels right in this day and age to address it. Also fine is Marin Ireland as Lucy's boss, a woman who has seen it all, and Louise Jacobson, who turned from Adore client to bride.
I have to say another main star of this film is New York City itself, seen as the backdrop of so many romantic comedies but here beautifully shot by cinematographer Shabier Kirchner and dressed by production designer Anthony Gasparro as a city where the perfect match is hard to light. A montage sequence featuring the lilting Harry Nilsson song, 'I Guess the Lord Must Be In New York City' is a true highlight (trivia fact: Nilsson wrote that song for Midnight Cowboy, but it was replaced instead by 'Everybody's Talking (at Me).' Another shout-out goes to Daniel Pemberton's nicely nuanced music score.
Materialists comes at the right time for a 'genre' that studios have forgotten audiences still want, and hopefully it will stand out as a nice alternative in a summer of tentpoles and action. Song has made a film that oddly can be admired by romantic purists and cynics, a movie whose end credits take place over the sight of a hugely busy New York Marriage Bureau visually assuring us sometimes people do find that elusive match, or at least hope so.
Producers are Song, Christine Vachon, Pamela Koffler and David Hinojosa.
Title: MaterialistsDistributor: A24 filmsRelease date: June 13, 2025Director-screenplay: Celine SongCast: Dakota Johnson, Chris Evans, Pedro Pascal, Zoe Winters, Marin Ireland, Louise JacobsonRating: RRunning time: 1 hr, 56 min
Best of Deadline
List Of Hollywood & Media Layoffs From Paramount To Warner Bros Discovery To CNN & More
Sean 'Diddy' Combs Sex-Trafficking Trial Updates: Cassie Ventura's Testimony, $10M Hotel Settlement, Drugs, Violence, & The Feds
A Full Timeline Of Blake Lively & Justin Baldoni's 'It Ends With Us' Feud In Court, Online & In The Media

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

'Spaceballs 2' is on its way, with Mel Brooks, Bill Pullman, and Rick Moranis reprising their roles
'Spaceballs 2' is on its way, with Mel Brooks, Bill Pullman, and Rick Moranis reprising their roles

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

'Spaceballs 2' is on its way, with Mel Brooks, Bill Pullman, and Rick Moranis reprising their roles

The Schwartz has been awakened! That's right: Writer-director Mel Brooks' cult classic Spaceballs is getting a sequel, 40 years after the sci-fi parody's original release. Jury's still out on whether it will be called Spaceballs 2: The The Search for More Money, as the original film joked. SEE ALSO: The 10 best movies of 2025 (so far), and where to watch them Amazon MGM Studios announced the sequel will be arriving in theaters in 2027, with a video of Brooks himself discussing making more Spaceballs. "After 40 years, we asked, 'What do the fans want?'" Brooks says. "But instead, we're making this movie." The video also sends up just how drastically the franchise landscape has changed since Spaceballs' 1987 release. In an opening title crawl, the video reminds us that there are now three Star Wars trilogies, several spin-off TV shows, and a whole host of other massive franchises, like "36 MCU movies with two different Robert Downey Jr.'s." So where will Spaceballs 2 fit into the world of franchises? Is it a sequel? A prequel? A reboot? According to its log line, it's actually "A Non-Prequel Non-Reboot Sequel Part Two but with Reboot Elements Franchise Expansion Film." While Spaceballs 2's plot details are currently under wraps, there's still lots to get excited about. Brooks will be reprising the role of Yogurt, Spaceballs' Yoda stand-in who encourages hero Lone Starr (Bill Pullman) to use the Schwartz. According to Deadline, Pullman is also set to return in Spaceballs 2, along with Rick Moranis, who played Spaceballs' villainous Dark Helmet. The role would mark Moranis' return to live-action films after a hiatus of 28 years. (Moranis did do voice work, like Brother Bear, as well as TV work during this time.) On top of the returning Spaceballs cast members, Spaceballs 2 will star Keke Palmer. Josh Gad is also expected to star. Gad wrote the script alongside Benji Samit and Dan Hernandez. Josh Greenbaum (Will & Harper, Barb and Star Go to Vista Del Mar) will direct. Spaceballs 2 hits theaters in 2027.

'Materialists' review: Dakota Johnson, Pedro Pascal and Chris Evans isn't the glossy rom-com many expected
'Materialists' review: Dakota Johnson, Pedro Pascal and Chris Evans isn't the glossy rom-com many expected

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

'Materialists' review: Dakota Johnson, Pedro Pascal and Chris Evans isn't the glossy rom-com many expected

Calling Celine Song's Materialists a rom-com is oversimplifying what we're really getting from the film. Starring Dakota Johnson, Pedro Pascal and Chris Evans, the movie takes the fantasy and tropes about love and relationships that we've grown accustomed to in classic rom-com films, and presents them in the real world context we sometimes like to avoid. It's the way that Song is able to tell a story that evaluates human behaviour in an honest way that makes her work stand out, and compels you to go on the journey she's presenting. And that's very much the case with Materialists. Materialists release date: June 13Director & writer: Celine SongCast: Dakota Johnson, Pedro Pascal, Chris EvansRuntime: 116 In Materialists Johnson plays a matchmaker in New York City. While she's certainly living beyond her means with her $80,000 salary, her job is to match the city's elite. But no matter your income bracket, the desperation to find a partner is alive and well. And Lucy understands how human beings evaluate and value each other. When Lucy attends a wedding of two of her clients she meets Harry (Pascal) who's classified as a "unicorn," a particularly "high value" bachelor. He's rich, handsome and desirably tall. But just as the two meet, in comes John (Evans), Lucy's ex who's working as a waiter at the wedding. John is the opposite of Harry. He's broke, living with roommates, struggling in his efforts to be a theatre actor. He's everything Lucy knows she doesn't want as she math-ing her best partner, but their magnetic connection is undeniable. Through both Lucy's own love life and matchmaking for her clients, Song's story dives into the commodification of ourselves, and others, that guides our connections. If you're someone who was blown away by Song's previous film Past Lives, Materialists is adding to the discussion about relationship, but in a different way. We've all watched rom-coms and fell for the fantasy of meeting the perfect person who will sweep us off our feet, but what Materialists does is shine a light on how many of those depictions of love and romance have twisted how we approach finding love. Amplified by things like dating apps, social media and other ways to commodify human beings. A simpler version of this story would have been cynical about how love is hard, heartbreak hurts and romance ends in disappointment, but Song's movie is more complex than that. A testament to her storytelling, she's able to weave back and forth just over that line of reimagining rom-com tropes in a real world context, but never completely disregarding how impactful romance is. The cast certainly works for these character, but because they're so beloved by many and have a rich history with fans, their presence essentially disarms you, in a way that helps to take in and feel the impact of Song's evaluation of how people objectify each other. At one point in the movie Song introduces Lucy finding out about sexual assault between her clients. While a very real risk, narratively it leaves questions about how it's handled as a plot device, and how Johnson's character would be impacted by that result to her matchmaking work. While not the glossy package that was sold in the movie's trailer, and particular scenes are more impactful than the full picture of Materialists, it's certainly an intriguing film that presents romance in a way you likely won't be expecting.

'Materialists' review: Dakota Johnson, Pedro Pascal and Chris Evans isn't the glossy rom-com many expected
'Materialists' review: Dakota Johnson, Pedro Pascal and Chris Evans isn't the glossy rom-com many expected

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

'Materialists' review: Dakota Johnson, Pedro Pascal and Chris Evans isn't the glossy rom-com many expected

Calling Celine Song's Materialists a rom-com is oversimplifying what we're really getting from the film. Starring Dakota Johnson, Pedro Pascal and Chris Evans, the movie takes the fantasy and tropes about love and relationships that we've grown accustomed to in classic rom-com films, and presents them in the real world context we sometimes like to avoid. It's the way that Song is able to tell a story that evaluates human behaviour in an honest way that makes her work stand out, and compels you to go on the journey she's presenting. And that's very much the case with Materialists. Materialists release date: June 13Director & writer: Celine SongCast: Dakota Johnson, Pedro Pascal, Chris EvansRuntime: 116 In Materialists Johnson plays a matchmaker in New York City. While she's certainly living beyond her means with her $80,000 salary, her job is to match the city's elite. But no matter your income bracket, the desperation to find a partner is alive and well. And Lucy understands how human beings evaluate and value each other. When Lucy attends a wedding of two of her clients she meets Harry (Pascal) who's classified as a "unicorn," a particularly "high value" bachelor. He's rich, handsome and desirably tall. But just as the two meet, in comes John (Evans), Lucy's ex who's working as a waiter at the wedding. John is the opposite of Harry. He's broke, living with roommates, struggling in his efforts to be a theatre actor. He's everything Lucy knows she doesn't want as she math-ing her best partner, but their magnetic connection is undeniable. Through both Lucy's own love life and matchmaking for her clients, Song's story dives into the commodification of ourselves, and others, that guides our connections. If you're someone who was blown away by Song's previous film Past Lives, Materialists is adding to the discussion about relationship, but in a different way. We've all watched rom-coms and fell for the fantasy of meeting the perfect person who will sweep us off our feet, but what Materialists does is shine a light on how many of those depictions of love and romance have twisted how we approach finding love. Amplified by things like dating apps, social media and other ways to commodify human beings. A simpler version of this story would have been cynical about how love is hard, heartbreak hurts and romance ends in disappointment, but Song's movie is more complex than that. A testament to her storytelling, she's able to weave back and forth just over that line of reimagining rom-com tropes in a real world context, but never completely disregarding how impactful romance is. The cast certainly works for these character, but because they're so beloved by many and have a rich history with fans, their presence essentially disarms you, in a way that helps to take in and feel the impact of Song's evaluation of how people objectify each other. At one point in the movie Song introduces Lucy finding out about sexual assault between her clients. While a very real risk, narratively it leaves questions about how it's handled as a plot device, and how Johnson's character would be impacted by that result to her matchmaking work. While not the glossy package that was sold in the movie's trailer, and particular scenes are more impactful than the full picture of Materialists, it's certainly an intriguing film that presents romance in a way you likely won't be expecting.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store