Hedda (2025)

Direction: Nia da Costa
Country: USA

Adapting Norwegian playwright Henrik Ibsen’s Hedda Gabler for the screen, Nia DaCosta delivers a pretentious period tale with an unsatisfying finale. The film’s eccentric rhythms prove insufficient to buoy an overstuffed plot marked by intrigue, machinations, and insincere pathos.

The film stars Tessa Thompson—who also co-produces—as the title character, a strong-willed, manipulative socialite interrogated about a shooting that occurred at her lavish party. It is at this same gathering that she is reunited with a former lover, the alcoholic writer Eileen Lövborg (Christian Petzold’s early muse Nina Hoss), and the latter’s new girlfriend, Thea Ellison (Imogen Poots), whom Hedda knows from her school years. Jealousy, overpowering egos, desire, and bourgeois feminine dominance all play into this slyly playful yet misbegotten game, a muddle made worse by the smug self-assurance of its mise-en-scène.

Awkward and atonal, Hedda feels like one of Cassavetes’ fervent dramas but without the genuine discomfort or emotional and psychological acuity that defined them. It is excessively dramatic, emotionally inaccessible, and ultimately absurd. The disparity between expectation and delivery is vast, resulting in a wholly doomed film that insists on putting on a brave face throughout its subpar staging. It may leave you wanting to take a long, cold shower afterward.

My Little Sister (2021)

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Direction: Stéphanie Chuat, Véronique Reymond
Country: Switzerland

A Nina Hoss in top form (one of Christian Petzold’s muses - Phoenix, 2014; Barbara, 2012) spearheads a capable cast invested to make this intensely sincere family drama work. My Little Sister deals with the subject of illness and death in all its hardness.

The sophomore fictional feature from the long-standing pair of directors, Stéphanie Chuat and Véronique Reymond, chronicles a difficult period in the life of twin siblings Lisa (Hoss), a former playwright turned educator, and Sven (Lars Eidinger), a passionate theater actor with terminal cancer, who reunite after the latter has been subjected to an unsuccessful bone marrow transplant. Their inextinguishable bond and the pain shared for not being able to do what they most like in life, will give them motives to fight the adversities with courage and perseverance, even if what they aspire seems impossible to be achieved.

The handheld camera attempts to reproduce the anxiety in Lisa, who’s having a hard time trying to convince her husband, Martin (Jens Albinus), to return to Berlin, especially after he has been offered a new 5-year work contract in Switzerland, where he runs an English school. Also, her neurotic, sloppy and ego-centered mother (Marthe Keller) is not much of a help, intensifying the moments of friction. 

Bathed in strong emotional currents, the story develops in a sober, believable way, showing a family in crisis but focusing its gaze on a dissatisfied, innerly fractured woman who desperately seeks some balance when in the eminent presence of loss.  

Bristling with different kinds of vulnerability, My Little Sister is grim, earnest and emotionally turbulent, inflicting that real-life pressure we look for in this kind of drama.

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