‘Eddington' Is the Perfect Conspiracy Thriller for a Broken, Brainwashed Nation
Ari Aster would like you to go back in time. The writer-director of Hereditary and Midsommar doesn't need you to travel too far. Just five years. You probably remember a few of the details from May 2020: social distancing, social-media diatribes, swabs being thrust violently into nasal cavities, 'I Can't Breathe,' uprisings in the streets. It's crazy to think all of this took place half a decade ago. It's even crazier to ignore the creeping sensation that we're still trapped in the moment when social stress fractures became chasms, as if doomed to repeat it like some cursed variation of Groundhog's Day.
Eddington is technically a period piece, given that it unfolds over several days in the aforementioned mensis horribilis. The movie doesn't particularly feel like one, however. Take away the Covid masks, and this mix of modern-day Western, political satire, and several other genres mashed into one manic panic attack could be set last week. Same divisiveness, same fingerpointing, same inability to agree on a consensual reality, same constantly present anxiety, same President. As they say in Cannes, where Aster — finally at the festival with a competition title — just premiered his latest waking nightmare: Plus ça change, plus c'est la même chose.
More from Rolling Stone
Kristen Stewart's 'The Chronology of Water' Is One Hell of a Directorial Debut
'Mission: Impossible - The Final Reckoning' Is One Long Tom Cruise Victory Lap
Cannes Honors David Lynch in 'Emotional' Tribute With Visionary's Son in Attendance
In the small New Mexico town that gives this fuse-set-to-slow-burn film its title, trouble's a-brewin'. The pandemic lockdowns are in full swing, but town sheriff Joe Cross (Joaquin Phoenix, channeling the same hapless mode he displayed in Aster's Beau Is Afraid) isn't keen on masks. Specifically, he's not down with the idea of enforcing a statewide mandate that folks wear them, because personal freedoms matter more than public safety, also the virus is a hoax, yadda yadda yadda. The mayor, Ted Garcia (Pedro Pascal), tries to be patient with this officer of the law, but the two men have a tempestuous history. Some of it has to do with a possible data center set to be built in Eddington. Some of it has to do with Cross's wife Lou (Emma Stone), who once dated Garcia. A lot of it has to do with diametrically opposed viewpoints made even worse by Covid and the culture wars.
After a skirmish at the local supermarket, Cross senses an opportunity to capitalize on the frustrations of some citizens. He impulsively announces, via a Facebook livestream, that he's running for mayor against Garcia in an upcoming election. The smear campaigning begins immediately. Neither his wife nor his conspiracy theorist of a mother-in-law (The Penguin's Deidre O'Connell) approves of Joe's newfound obsession about politics. Especially since Lou has become curiously interested in an internet muckraker-slash-crackpot guru named Vernon Jefferson Peak (Austin Butler) and his ideas about vast rings of powerful pedophiles pulling all of the strings behind the scenes.
Meanwhile, a teenager names Brian (Cameron Mann) becomes 'radicalized' by the Black Lives Matter slogans and George Floyd protests, mostly because a young woman named Sarah (Amélie Hoeferle) is reading a book by Angela Davis. Soon, he's leading protests on Main Street and going on about white privilege. Cue broken windows, outside agitators, flame-stoking viral videos, accusations of Antifa false-flag operations — you know the drill. Brian's best friend, Eric (Matt Gomez Hidaka), who's also the mayor's son, has eyes for Sarah as well. This rivalry would have repercussions.
So will Joe's attempt to suggest that his fellow candidate is a sexual predator, a gambit that spectacularly backfires on him. He's soon pushed to the brink, which leads to… well, let's just say things fall apart and the center — what little was left of it — cannot hold. For the bulk of Eddington's first half, the primary mode is broad-swipe satirical, with Aster & Co. lashing out almost indiscriminately at a host of contemporary archetypes: the way-too-online truthers, the faux-spiritual scam artists, the zero-to-woke Gen Z activists, the politicos trading on personal tragedy and carefully calibrated empathy to goose voters. (One of the funniest moments is a throwaway gag in Garcia's campaign video featuring Pascal tenderly noodling on a piano in the middle of Eddington's downtown.)
As for Cross, he's given the full swaggering, swinging-dick cowboy treatment, a reminder that some Great American Caricatures are timeless. He's also meant to invoke law-and-order blowhards like Arizona's Joe Arpaio and any number of current opportunistic parasites keen to ride the red-pill wave; that Phoenix juggles all of this and still makes the character feel organically wounded is a testament to his talent. The overall lack of subtlety suits the age Aster is taking to task, though it also makes everything feel slightly wobbly on its feet. The viewpoint is both-sides misanthropy. Jonathan Swift has some notes.
Then a need for a cover-up causes a gear shift into Coen brothers territory, with Joe, his deputies (Michael Ward and Yellowstone's Luke Grimes) and a nosy detective (William Belleau) from the Native American sovereignty next door engaging in various shenanigans. Don't get too attached, however. It's a feint as well. There's still one more hand to be played, an unexpected narrative left turn that reveals what may be Eddington's true form: a conspiracy thriller for a nation too broken to be mended, too brainwashed to come back from the brink, and too far gone to avoid manifesting its worst wishes and fears. Just because you're paranoid, etc., etc.
And now you're fully in an Ari Aster movie, and you suddenly realize that its clothing has been made of the finest sheepskin available and tailored for hiding the wolves already at the door. We're in nightmare territory again, with the filmmaker bringing out the formalist chops and ability to build upon one unexpected turn after another that's already made him a cult figure among cinema nerds. A coda reminds us that history repeats itself first as tragedy, then as podcast-celebrity fodder. Corruption is now Eddington's unavoidable currency, but let's not limit it to one small town in New Mexico. It's a horror story of much deeper, darker strain — a possession parable in which all of the demons are both civically linked and inner. Aster has given us another movie that chills you, unnerves you and makes you want to crawl out of your skin. You just wish this one didn't feel so close to being nonfiction.
Best of Rolling Stone
The 50 Best 'Saturday Night Live' Characters of All Time
Denzel Washington's Movies Ranked, From Worst to Best
70 Greatest Comedies of the 21st Century
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
an hour ago
- Yahoo
'The Bachelorette' Alum Jillian Harris Celebrates Bachelorette Party After 8-Year Engagement
Jillian Harris revealed she recently celebrated her bachelorette party at the Fairmont Jasper Park Lodge in Canada ahead of her fall nuptials 15 of her closest loved ones attended the events, which included dinners, canoeing and dancing Harris and fiancé Justin Pasutto are set to tie the knot in Europe in Fall 2025Jillian Harris is celebrating her soon-to-be wedding with loved ones. The Bachelorette alum, 45, shared a look at her bachelorette party — eight years in the making — ahead of her European nuptials with fiancé Justin Pasutto. 'After eight years of being engaged, I finally had my Bachelorette party, and here's how it went…,' she wrote over a video showing her and her friends throwing off their cowboy hats in celebration in front of the Fairmont Jasper Park Lodge in Canada. Clips showed that the girls decorated the space with the words 'Last Hoedown,' and Harris even had a white 'bride' cowboy hat for the occasion. She showed a bartender pouring cocktails and the girls sharing drinks and dancing. Additional clips showed them doing yoga and taking a dip in a lake. 'All of my favorite things, we did it all,' Harris said in the video, as she and her closest loved ones got into a canoe and rowed down a lake. The girls also chomped down on several different meals and drank wine. 'Going back to my Alberta roots with 15 of my besties was exactly what my soul needed,' she captioned the post. 'We made so many unforgettable memories. From the yummiest food, to morning pilates and canoeing on the lake, dancing to country music, singing, belly laughing, and stories we'll be telling for years.' Never miss a story — sign up for to stay up-to-date on the best of what PEOPLE has to offer, from celebrity news to compelling human interest stories. 'Honestly, I couldn't have imagined a better way to celebrate this next chapter surrounded by the people who are so special to me. My heart is SO full.🤠🫶🏼🥹🏔️🥂👰🏽♀️ #hosted,' she concluded her caption. Harris confirmed earlier this week that she and Pasutto were planning a 2025 European wedding after eight years of being engaged. The couple met in 2012, got engaged in December 2016 and share two children: 8-year-old Leo and 6-year-old daughter Annie. They had initially planned for a Summer 2020 wedding, but postponed it due to COVID. Then, while the couple was planning a family trip to Europe to celebrate Harris' mom's 70th birthday in 2024, she had an idea to 'just get married' there. They eventually postponed it one more time, landing on a Fall 2025 wedding date. "Yeah, it's going to happen. We were going to pull it off this fall, and everything was looking great, and we told everybody that was in our wedding party and the people that were coming that it was happening," Pasutto told PEOPLE in an exclusive interview last summer. Harris chimed in, saying that the couple was "excited" for the big day, particularly since they've settled on a location. "Justin is Italian, and I love Europe," she shared. "We just couldn't think of anywhere that felt right, and when we're there, we just love the bread and the cheese and the music and the laid-back culture, and it just feels like you could do something a little bit more laid-back there. And we love traveling, so that is the plan." Read the original article on People


CNBC
2 hours ago
- CNBC
Broadway box office hits record $1.89B in 2024-2025 season
Theatre goers spent big bucks this year to see some of Hollywood's biggest starts on the 'Great White Way'. Brandon Gomez breaks down which shows brought in the most ticket sales and how Broadway returned to audience numbers not seen since pre-Covid.
Yahoo
3 hours ago
- Yahoo
David Shaw and Tarriona ‘Tank' Ball Bring the Heat to New Orleans' Musicians on Musicians Event
Even with Bourbon Street bustling outside, nothing matched the buzzy energy of The Jazz Playhouse at The Royal Sonesta Hotel New Orleans as musicians David Shaw of the Revivalists and Tarriona 'Tank' Ball from Tank and the Bangas sat down with Rolling Stone senior music editor Joseph Hudak for the latest installment of the 'Musicians on Musicians' series in partnership with Sonesta International Hotels. Sitting on stage, closely surrounded by Sonesta Travel Pass guests and a lucky handful of their biggest fans, Shaw and Tank bonded over their unique artistry, friendship, and connections to New Orleans. 'The real focus is how place and location influence your creativity,' said Hudak, referring to the city's culture and how deeply entwined it is with both Shaw and Tank's music. More from Rolling Stone Making Music and Memories in Myrtle Beach How TikTok Is Rewriting the Rules for Emerging Artists How to Buy 'Rolling Stone Presents: Amplified, the Immersive Rock Experience' Tickets Online Shaw described moving from Ohio to New Orleans in 2007 to work for a gas company during the rebuild after Hurricane Katrina. 'I was a construction worker and also making music,' he said. Coming from what he described as 'cowshit and cornstalks,' New Orleans 'felt so different and foreign in such an amazing way…Immediately I could tell the city had a special feeling to it.' Still, he is careful to pay homage to the local musicians whose hard work and legacy have carved out the Crescent City as a premiere destination for great live music: 'Not being from here, it's really about respect and respecting the lineage.' As a spoken-word artist, Tank—who won her first Grammy in 2025 for Best Spoken Word Poetry Album with Tank and the Bangas' The Heart, The Mind, The Soul— got her start at local open mics. 'What made my open mic night really special is it was a poetry open mic and so I always felt so comfortable to be myself because the poets were so encouraging,' she recalled. It was this support and community that provided her with the space to create her signature combination of R&B and poetry. 'New Orleans is about authenticity,' Shaw added. 'Just be you and the wind will carry you.' Both artists have been fans of each other for a long time and recently played together at this year's Jazz and Heritage Festival. 'I love a good live show and I love a good live singer,' Tank gushed to Shaw. 'You're like a rock star to me!' Mentioning her influences (which range from poets Maya Angelou and Nicky to musicians like Queen and Tina Turner), she was also quick to add, 'The Revivalists are dope, too.' Asked what people get wrong about New Orleans music, Tank and Shaw encouraged visitors and locals alike to explore the city's culture beyond the big events like Mardi Gras. 'There's an underbelly of a different type of artistry that locals make come alive,' explained Tank. 'People in New Orleans entertain every day and half the time the music is free…They pour their life into it because it is a part of us.' Following the conversation, guests refreshed their cocktails, which included spicy palomas and local rye-based favorite the Vieux Carré, snacked on beignets, then settled in for intimate sets by both artists. Shaw, playing the acoustic guitar, kicked things off with 'Come Back Home' off his solo album Take a Look Inside. He then introduced a new song 'Lost and Found,' saying, 'It's probably my favorite song I've written in awhile…I'm a pretty shy guy, but—dammit—I'm proud of this one!' After more songs and stories, he reluctantly finished with 'When You Love Somebody,' telling the audience, 'Someone's gonna have to cut me off because I'm having too much fun.' Next, Tank took the stage with the Bangas, first playing the contagiously joyful 'Spaceships' from 2019's Green Balloon. The band's energy never flagged as they moved onto songs including 'Boxes and Squares' and a cover of fellow New Orleanian Louis Armstrong's 'What a Wonderful World,' with a special spoken word addition by Tank. Calling to the happy audience, she sang, 'If you love New Orleans, say it's a wonderful world!' As the Sonesta International Hotels hosted 'Musicians on Musicians' events continue, Sonesta Travel Pass members will have the opportunity to attend and cheer on celebrated artists in multiple cities throughout this year. Stay tuned for more updates! { pmcCnx({ settings: { plugins: { pmcAtlasMG: { iabPlcmt: 1, }, pmcCnx: { singleAutoPlay: 'auto' } } }, playerId: "ac5f547a-22e1-4877-8050-448c6e0f365c", mediaId: "95d58362-53f9-4b97-b818-1f6d938d13e2", }).render("connatix_player_95d58362-53f9-4b97-b818-1f6d938d13e2_1"); }); Best of Rolling Stone The 50 Greatest Eminem Songs All 274 of Taylor Swift's Songs, Ranked The 500 Greatest Albums of All Time