Current:Home > Finance'All of Us Strangers' movie review: A beautiful ghost story you won't soon forget -EliteFunds
'All of Us Strangers' movie review: A beautiful ghost story you won't soon forget
View
Date:2025-04-19 21:03:58
What if you could have one more conversation with a lost loved one? What would you say? Would it help you move on or just entrench you more in the past?
Writer/director Andrew Haigh’s brilliant “All of Us Strangers” (★★★★ out of four; rated R; in select theaters now, nationwide Friday) is both lyrical fantasy romance and masterfully told ghost story. To call it haunting might be trite but also spot on: With a terrific performance from Andrew Scott as a queer screenwriter at a crossroads, “Strangers” is the sort of cinematic balm that not only touches your soul but takes up prime real estate.
Adam (Scott) lives an isolated life in his weirdly empty London high-rise apartment complex, noshing cookies on the couch rather than working. He decides to travel to his childhood home in the suburbs, a trip where he runs into his dad (Jamie Bell) and mom (Claire Foy). Mind you, they died in a 1987 holiday car accident just before Adam turned 12, but he finds them again – at around the same age he is now – full of questions for their now grown-up boy.
Adam visits often and engages in the heartfelt conversations they would have had if his parents lived. He comes out to his mom, who’s stuck in a 1980s mindset and worries about AIDS, and has an emotional and honest conversation with his father about childhood traumas that leave both of them in tears.
At the same time he’s opening up to them, Adam finds the creative juices flowing again and also begins a relationship with his downstairs neighbor Harry (Paul Mescal). At first, Harry shows up at Adam’s door with booze, with Adam rebuffing his advances (and almost immediately reconsidering), but he begins to lean on Harry for comfort, support and the occasional ketamine-fueled night out. But what throws Adam is when these two different relationship journeys begin to tie together and unravel in delirious fashion.
'All of Us Strangers':New film is a cathartic 'love letter' to queer people and their parents
Haigh, whose film is an adaptation of Taichi Yamada’s novel “Strangers,” fills the screen with warm, colorful textures, and many of the characters are seen in reflections, be it on a metro train or in a home, which adds to the film’s fanciful reverie. (It also uses Frankie Goes to Hollywood's "The Power of Love" to interesting narrative effect.) Adam and his mother even have a conversation about whether what they’re experiencing is real and how long it will last. “I don’t suppose we get to decide when it’s over,” she says, one of the film’s most touching lines.
“Strangers” isn’t the first to mine similar metaphysical ground – “Field of Dreams” did it magnificently as well, though this movie goes further in reconnecting a son with the mom and dad who suddenly weren’t in his life anymore. They ask Adam about the circumstances of their demise, and he’s extremely caring in those moments, though he's more open with Harry about how their deaths led to his solitude. The film tackles the way people relate to their parents, face loneliness, come to grips with their sexuality but also struggle with thinking that the future doesn’t matter.
Andrew Scott:From Hot Priest to ‘All of Us Strangers,’ actor is ready to ‘share more’ of himself
Scott is the perfect conduit for such a thoughtful exploration of feelings, and it’s a star-making role for an actor who should already be one after his deliciously demented Moriarty on TV’s “Sherlock” and delightful Hot Priest on “Fleabag.” As Adam, Scott captures the boyish glee and wonder of seeing his parents again around a Christmas tree yet also the panic and worry that only comes when you truly care for somebody.
While examining love, grief and the phantoms we carry with us, Haigh leaves much of his sweetly elegiac character study to a viewer’s interpretation. Everyone will read different things into what it really means from beginning to quietly stellar end, and in that sense, we might be “Strangers” but we’re all human.
veryGood! (9876)
Related
- 3 years after the NFL added a 17th game, the push for an 18th gets stronger
- Thomas Kingston, Husband of Lady Gabriella Windsor and Pippa Middleton’s Ex, Dead at 45
- Bridgeport voters try again to pick mayor after 1st election tossed due to absentee ballot scandal
- Rachel Bilson and Audrina Patridge Share Scary Details of Bling Ring Robberies
- USA women's basketball live updates at Olympics: Start time vs Nigeria, how to watch
- I Shop Fashion for a Living, and I Predict These Cute Old Navy Finds Will Sell Out This Month
- Ferguson, Missouri, agrees to pay $4.5 million to settle ‘debtors’ prison’ lawsuit
- Maryland Senate votes for special elections to fill legislative vacancies
- Kehlani Responds to Hurtful Accusation She’s in a Cult
- Cherry Starr, philanthropist wife of the late Green Bay Packers quarterback Bart Starr, dies at 89
Ranking
- Travis Hunter, the 2
- U.S. and U.K. conduct fourth round of joint airstrikes on Houthi targets in Yemen
- Cardboard box filled with unopened hockey cards sells for more than $3.7 million at auction
- UK’s Prince William pulls out of memorial service for his godfather because of ‘personal matter’
- Person accused of accosting Rep. Nancy Mace at Capitol pleads not guilty to assault charge
- Brandon Jenner's Wife Cayley Jenner Is Pregnant, Expecting Baby No. 3 Together
- Drake expresses support for Tory Lanez after Megan Thee Stallion shooting
- Man pleads guilty in deaths of 2 officers at Virginia college in 2022 and is sentenced to life
Recommendation
How breaking emerged from battles in the burning Bronx to the Paris Olympics stage
King Charles and Queen Camilla React to Unexpected Death of Thomas Kingston at 45
Have you been financially impacted by a weather disaster? Tell us about it
U.K. companies that tried a 4-day workweek report lasting benefits more than a year on
Meta donates $1 million to Trump’s inauguration fund
Police arrest three suspects in killing of man on Bronx subway car
Chiefs coach Andy Reid shares uplifting message for Kansas City in wake of parade shooting
Jacob Rothschild, financier from a family banking dynasty, dies at 87