Hedda
Drama, Thriller, Romance
Storyline
Hedda Gabler finds herself torn between the lingering ache of a past love and the quiet suffocation of her present life. Over the course of one charged night, long-repressed desires and hidden tensions eruptâpulling her and everyone around her into a spiral of manipulation, passion, and betrayal.
"A little chaos is good for the gathering."
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Reviews from the Web
"**Awful acting** I am sorry but tessa thompson is a terrible lead actress. I saw her try to act in this movie as well as West World and she needs to find a new day job. My husband actually started laughing out loud at one of her "serious" scenes. Movie was pretty crummy anyway, I don't think a different lead actress would have saved it."
Read full review â"I don't understand how the lead actress in this keeps getting parts? She's a terrible actress, it's like she is sitting at a table read and just reading her lines aloud. She has absolutely zero charisma and is is definitely not attractive, nor even cute. I guess Hollywood continues to cast people like her for **some reason**."
Read full review â"Reinterpreting a classic work of art â no matter what medium it might initially be grounded in â can be a tricky task. This is true when jumping from one milieu to another, such as stage to screen, as well when altering the nature or elements of the work, such as its setting, time frame and characters. And, if more than one of these qualities undergoes transformation simultaneously, the metamorphosis can become considerably challenging, if not problematic. Such is the task undertaken by writer-director Nia DaCosta in this reimagining of the time-honored stage play Hedda Gabler by Norwegian playwright Henrik Ibsen. When Ibsen penned this work in 1890, it represented a continuation of his examination of strong-willed women, an undertaking that some contend ironically made him a pioneer of feminist thinking. That initiative began with A Dollâs House in 1879, a play in which he chronicled the life of a subservient wife and mother who courageously rose up to challenge her controlling husband. In Gabler, however, Ibsen wrote about a darker figure, an ambitious, manipulative trophy wife who sought a life of wealth and comfort and willfully did whatever it took to achieve it, no matter how questionable or menacing. In this current adaptation, the filmmaker advances themes launched in Ibsenâs original production but with some adjustments to make it more contemporary â and more sinister. For starters, this version is set in the 1950s rather than the late 19th Century, complete with technology, musical styles and other aspects of everyday life that werenât in existence in Ibsenâs time. Hedda (Tessa Thompson) has changed somewhat, too; sheâs still the insincere, conniving schemer she was in the original, though sheâs now Black, bisexual and more compellingly driven than ever. As before, sheâs married to an adoring but somewhat dull, overly cerebral university academic, George (Tom Bateman), whoâs bucking for a professorship that will compensate him handsomely, enabling him to dotingly support his beloved in the lap of luxury she craves, an effort she doesnât always appreciate. However, Georgeâs hopes for being promoted arenât guaranteed given the challenge posed by a rival peer, Eileen (Nina Hoss), who recently wrote a successful, high-profile best seller â and who also just happens to be Heddaâs former romantic interest. These story threads all come together at a lavish soiree hosted by George and Hedda to help bolster his chances for promotion. And the evening initially seems to proceed well until Eileen makes an appearance, along with her literary collaborator and fawning would-be lover, Thea (Imogen Poots), a certified milquetoast who just happens to be a childhood friend of Hedda. As the party unfolds, Hedda deftly spins her little schemes to turn events to her favor but with consequences that turn out to be even more unexpected than she had anticipated. This web of intrigue is set against an uninhibited backdrop that echoes the unbridled celebratory self-indulgence seen in movies like âThe Great Gatsbyâ (2013) and âBabylon,â with dashes of âEyes Wide Shutâ (1999) thrown in for erotic good measure. In many ways, though, the narrative largely plays like a catty, vengeful, quasi-campy 1980s prime time soap (albeit one that, fortunately, manages to improve as it progresses into its later chapters). However, despite the filmâs efforts to convey a meaningful message about the virtues of pursuing what truly matters most in life, the story nevertheless becomes bogged down by deplorable characters who possess few, if any, redeeming qualities. In addition, most of the filmmakerâs tweaks from Ibsenâs original may be provocative in nature but are ultimately mostly cosmetic in terms of their contributions. Perhaps the most significant saving grace here are the performances, particularly among supporting cast members like Hoss and Poots. As for Thompson, though, as valiantly as she tries to capture the essence of one of the most demanding female roles in all of acting, she doesnât quite give Hedda the due that her character calls for, making it often appear as though the actress is struggling to tackle a portrayal thatâs still beyond her grasp. And that sentiment, for what itâs worth, sums up how I see this offering overall â a commendable attempt at imbuing a true classic with a new vision on, one definitely worthy of applause but not the acclaim it so earnestly seems to seek."
Read full review â"Right from the start, when we hear âHeddaâ (Tessa Thompson) called to the phone, we can discern that Nia DaCosta has shifted the timeline from the late 1800s. Indeed, we now find ourselves in the middle of the 20th century in a grand stately home where her academic husband âGeorgeâ (Tom Bateman) is imploring her to pull out all of the stops at a lavish party they are to host to impress âProf. Greenwoodâ (Finbar Lynch) who is looking for someone to take a lucrative tenure at his university. âHeddaâ has other plans for the evening, though, especially when his rival âEileenâ (Nina Hoss) shows up - a woman with whom she has had a past, and then swiftly afterwards by her rather insipid lover âTheaâ (Imogen Poots) whom âHeddaâ also knew, though from childhood this time. With the champagne flowing, the scene is now set for the hostess to have some fun. Nobody, including her completely out of his depth husband, is safe but itâs the unexpected nature of the wheels coming off that leads to a toxicity and then to a tragedy that wasnât on anyoneâs horizon at the start of the evening. Now candidly, this just didnât really work for me. The whole production looked like it was spawned by one of Sir Kenneth Branaghâs âPoirotâ remakes with lots of hedonism (well dirty talk, anyway) and over-indulgence thrown in to create a melodrama of remarkably dull proportions. Perhaps Iâm just too sanitised to stories of excess, or to the increasingly ubiquitous lesbian sub-plots that we canât seem to do without nowadays, but Thompson just didnât exude anything like enough of the manipulative and scheming âHeddaâ to convince. Moreover, as the film develops itâs really quite unclear why she and her husband might ever have married on the first place. Ibsenâs play makes it clear she is an ambitious and venal woman, but here that character is effortlessly outperformed by an Hoss who brings a voluptuous and calculating feistiness to her role, and who certainly steals most the latter part of the film. Sure, effort has gone into the look of the film and at times it can resonate, but with lacklustre efforts from Nicholas Pinnock and Poots offering little to support the complexities of the original, I was just left feeling somewhat underwhelmed. In some ways it reminded me of âCarmen Jonesâ (1954). A timeless story transferred to an era where the story played second fiddle to the updated visuals and the soundtrack of a time where it just didnât really belong."
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