Beau Is Afraid
Beau Is Afraid is a 2023 American surrealist tragicomedy horror film written, directed, and co-produced by Ari Aster.[5][6] The film stars Joaquin Phoenix as the title character, Beau Wassermann, and also includes a supporting ensemble cast consisting of Patti LuPone, Nathan Lane, Amy Ryan, Kylie Rogers, Parker Posey, Stephen McKinley Henderson, Hayley Squires, Michael Gandolfini, Zoe Lister-Jones, Armen Nahapetian, and Richard Kind. Its plot follows the mild-mannered but paranoia-ridden Beau as he embarks on a surreal odyssey to get home to attend his mother's funeral, realizing his greatest fears along the way.
Beau Is Afraid | |
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Directed by | Ari Aster |
Written by | Ari Aster |
Produced by |
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Starring | |
Cinematography | Pawel Pogorzelski |
Edited by | Lucian Johnston |
Music by | Bobby Krlic |
Production companies |
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Distributed by | A24 |
Release dates |
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Running time | 179 minutes[1] |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Budget | $35 million[2] |
Box office | $11.5 million[3][4] |
Distributed by A24, Beau Is Afraid premiered at the Alamo Drafthouse Cinema on April 1, 2023, and began a limited theatrical release in the United States on April 14, 2023, before a wide release the following week. The film received generally positive reviews from critics but was a box-office bomb, grossing only $11 million.[7]
Plot
Beau Wasserman is the son of a famous and wealthy businesswoman, Mona, who is responsible for building a large conglomerate empire. He grows up without a father, who his mother says died the night Beau was conceived due to a heart murmur caused by an orgasm. As a teenager on a cruise trip with his mother, Beau meets and falls in love with a girl named Elaine. The two kiss and promise to remain virgins until they meet again as adults.
As an adult, Beau is extremely anxious and living alone in a crime-ridden city. He prepares for a flight to see his mother for the anniversary of his father's death, but misses his plane after his keys and luggage are stolen from his door. Beau calls his mother to explain the situation, but she dismisses him. After having been locked out by deranged homeless people for the night, he attempts to call his mother, only to have it answered by a UPS driver who tells him that she was decapitated in an accident, after a chandelier fell on her head. After violent confrontations with an intruder at home, then by a police officer and a murderer on the street, Beau is hit by a food truck.
Beau wakes up wounded two days later in the house of a married couple, Grace and Roger, who live with their angsty teenage daughter Toni, and care for an unstable veteran named Jeeves, who was their late son's battle buddy until he was killed in action. Beau calls Mona's attorney, Dr. Cohen, who chastises him and informs Beau that despite the Jewish custom to lay the body to rest as soon as possible, her last wish was not to be buried until he was present. Roger promises to take Beau to his mother's estate as soon as possible but insists Beau rest until he is healed. On the day of Beau's release, Toni attempts to force him to drink a can of paint, before doing it herself, committing suicide. Grace walks in on Beau standing over Toni's body and violently blames him for her death. As Beau flees into the woods, Grace sends Jeeves after him.
Lost in the wilderness, Beau comes upon a group of traveling theatre actors named "The Orphans of the Forest". He is invited to their rehearsal and becomes entranced by the play, imagining himself as the protagonist, who spends his entire life looking for his family after they are separated by a flood. A man approaches Beau and informs him that he knew his father, who he says is still alive. The troupe is ambushed by Jeeves, who slaughters several actors. Beau flees deeper into the woods.
Beau hitchhikes the rest of the way to his mother's estate, only to find that he has just missed her funeral. Beau is awakened from a nap when a woman arrives late for the service, and realizes it is Elaine. They reconnect before having sex. Beau is terrified that he is going to die upon climaxing but is relieved when he survives. Elaine, however, dies mid-orgasm, her body frozen stiff. Mona then appears from the shadows and reveals that she has been alive and spying on him all along his journey. She guilt-trips Beau for supposedly not loving her enough and he demands to know the truth about his father. Mona takes him to the attic, where Beau learns that he not only has a twin brother, but that his father is actually a giant penis-shaped monster. At that moment, Jeeves breaks into the house and is killed by the monster. After further degrading from his mother, an enraged Beau briefly attempts to strangle her before she collapses.
In shock, Beau leaves the estate on a motorboat. After entering a cave, the boat's motor begins to stall, and he suddenly finds himself in a crowded arena; he is put on trial for perceived slights against his mother, with Mona and Dr. Cohen acting as prosecutors and a cheap lawyer defending Beau. With his feet glued to the boat, Beau tries to fend for himself and appeal to his mother, but she does not respond. Realizing he is completely hopeless in his situation, he decides to accept his fate. The motor explodes, capsizing the boat and drowning Beau. The crowd silently leaves the arena with Dr. Cohen and Mona, who sobs uncontrollably.
Cast
- Joaquin Phoenix as Beau Wassermann[8]
- Armen Nahapetian as young Beau[8]
- Patti LuPone as Mona Wassermann[8]
- Zoe Lister-Jones as young Mona [8]
- Amy Ryan as Grace[8]
- Nathan Lane as Roger[8]
- Kylie Rogers as Toni[8]
- Denis Ménochet as Jeeves[8]
- Parker Posey as Elaine Bray[8]
- Julia Antonelli as young Elaine[8]
- Stephen McKinley Henderson as the therapist[8]
- Richard Kind as Dr. Cohen[8]
- Hayley Squires as Penelope[8]
- Julian Richings as Strange Man[8]
- Bill Hader as UPS Guy[8]
- Michael Esper as Officer Johnson
- Michael Gandolfini, Théodore Pellerin and Mike Taylor as Beau's sons[8]
Alicia Rosario appears as Toni's friend Liz. Patrick Kwok-Choon, Maev Beaty, and Arthur Holden appear as members of the forest theatre troupe. David Mamet has a vocal cameo as a rabbi.
Production
Development
The film had been in development by Ari Aster for some time, with a 2011 short film entitled Beau, that would later serve as the basis for a sequence in the feature film, and a 2014 draft of the script that circulated on the internet.[9] Aster has described the film in many ways, including initially as a "nightmare comedy,"[10] "a Jewish Lord of the Rings, but [Beau's] just going to his mom's house," and as "if you pumped a 10-year-old full of Zoloft, and [had] him get your groceries."[11]
Filming
In February 2021, A24 announced the film, then titled Disappointment Blvd.,[lower-alpha 1] with Joaquin Phoenix on board to star in the leading role.[13] The film's ensemble cast was announced in June and July.[14][15]
Co-star Stephen McKinley Henderson described Aster and Phoenix as "so simpatico ... their way of working together was like they were really old friends. They could get upset and make up in the span of seconds, it seemed. But the work was always the better for it."[16] During a Q&A session on April 1, 2023 with actress Emma Stone, Aster recounted an incident in which, during the shooting of a "very intense" scene involving Phoenix's co-star Patti LuPone, Phoenix suddenly collapsed and lost consciousness as a result of the physical intensity of his stunts, which included breaking through glass. Initially annoyed because "it was a really good take", Aster realized it was serious as "[Phoenix] was letting people touch him and people were tending to him and he was allowing it".[17]
Principal photography began on June 28, 2021, and concluded that October.[18][19] The film was shot in Downtown Montreal, and Saint-Bruno-de-Montarville, an off-island suburb of Montreal in Quebec, with cinematographer Pawel Pogorzelski and production designer Fiona Crombie.[20][19] Animation for the film was done by Cristobal León & Joaquín Cociña, who were personally chosen by Aster for their work on the 2018 stop-motion film The Wolf House.[21] With a budget of $35 million, Beau Is Afraid is A24's most expensive film.[2]
Music
The film's score, like with Aster's previous film Midsommar, was composed and produced by British electronic musician Bobby Krlic, who performs under the name The Haxan Cloak. With the score, Krlic stated that "every step of the way [in the film, in relation to the score], you're with Joaquin, you're with Beau", adding that the score is meant to be a representation of Beau's mental state throughout the events of the film.[22]
The score was released on April 14, 2023, a week before the film's wide theatrical release, through A24's music division, and is separated into five parts, corresponding with the five acts of the film in which the songs appear.[23]
Release
Theatrical
Beau Is Afraid officially premiered in Los Angeles on April 10, 2023, at the Directors Guild of America, with Aster and the cast in attendance.[24] The film initially had a sneak premiere with a Q&A moderated by Emma Stone at the Alamo Drafthouse Cinema in Brooklyn, New York as part of an April Fools' Day event with livestream screenings provided at Alamo theaters in select cities, as the audience attending was originally scheduled to watch the director's cut of Aster's Midsommar (2019).[25] Further exclusive Q&A screenings were conducted, with moderators such as Martin Scorsese, Nathan Fielder and Rachel Sennott.[26] The film was released theatrically in the United States by A24 on April 21, 2023,[27] following a delay from its original 2022 schedule.[28]
The film was shown a week early in select IMAX theaters in Los Angeles and New York on April 14, before being released in select North American IMAX theaters on April 21.[29]
Reception
Box office
In its opening weekend the film grossed $320,396 (an average of $80,099) from four theaters, finishing 14th at the box office.[31] Expanding to 965 theaters in its second weekend, the film made $2.7 million, finishing ninth.[32] In its third weekend the film made $1.4 million from 2,125 theaters, finishing 13th.[33] In October 2023, TheWrap reported that the film took a $35 million loss.[34]
Critical response
On the review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes, 67% of 257 critics' reviews are positive, with an average rating of 6.8/10. The website's consensus reads: "Beau Is Afraid is overstuffed to the point of erasing the line between self-flagellation and self-indulgence, but Ari Aster's bravura and Joaquin Phoenix's sheer commitment give this neurotic odyssey undeniable power."[35] Metacritic, which uses a weighted average, assigned the film a score of 63 out of 100, based on 51 critics, indicating "generally favorable" reviews.[36]
Reviewing for RogerEbert.com, Nick Allen gave the film three and a half out of four stars, calling it "gobsmacking, sometimes exhausting, always beguiling," and wrote that it was Aster's "funniest movie yet." He praised Phoenix's performance as "fascinating," and concluded that "the ambition is the point."[37]
Manohla Dargis of the New York Times wrote that the film was "a supersized, fitfully amusing, self-important tale of fear and loathing," and chastised the run-time by saying, "It's a journey; midway, it becomes a slog."[38]
Accolades
Award | Date of ceremony | Category | Nominee(s) | Result | Ref. |
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Golden Trailer Awards | June 29, 2023 | Most Original Trailer | "Beyond" (AV Squad) | Nominated | [39] |
Best Drama Poster | "Payoff" (AV Print) | Nominated | |||
Hollywood Critics Association Midseason Film Awards | June 30, 2023 | Best Actor | Joaquin Phoenix | Nominated | [40] |
Best Supporting Actress | Patti LuPone | Nominated | |||
References
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Notes
- Aster later said in a 2023 Reddit AMA that the title was a cover-up, meant to be a distraction from the early draft of script of the film that circulated online.[12]