New York Tech Media
  • News
  • FinTech
  • AI & Robotics
  • Cybersecurity
  • Startups & Leaders
  • Venture Capital
No Result
View All Result
  • News
  • FinTech
  • AI & Robotics
  • Cybersecurity
  • Startups & Leaders
  • Venture Capital
No Result
View All Result
New York Tech Media
No Result
View All Result
Home News

Everything Everywhere All At Once review: charming, sprawling, and completely ridiculous

New York Tech Editorial Team by New York Tech Editorial Team
March 12, 2022
in News
0
Everything Everywhere All At Once review: charming, sprawling, and completely ridiculous
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

Perhaps the weirdest thing about Everything Everywhere All At Once, a film in which a notable plot point involves riffing on 2001: A Space Odyssey to explain an alternate reality where humans evolved hot dogs for fingers, is that it sometimes doesn’t feel that weird. Directed by Daniel Kwan and Daniel Scheinert, it lies at the intersection of a frenetic music video marathon, a slapstick martial arts comedy, and a surrealist sci-fi pastiche. But it’s anchored in an earnest family drama that’s elevated by a series of great performances, particularly from central star Michelle Yeoh.

There’s a whole lot going on in Everything Everywhere, but the basic gist is straightforward. Evelyn Wang (Yeoh) is the harried owner of a failing laundromat and a messy, unsatisfying life. Her apparently milquetoast husband Waymond (Ke Huy Quan) has served her with divorce papers, her perpetually demanding father’s (James Hong) health is failing, and her daughter Joy (Stephanie Hsu) is frustrated by Evelyn’s own snippy disapproval. A ruthless IRS worker named Deirdre Beaubeirdra (Jamie Lee Curtis) is auditing her for, among countless other dubious decisions, claiming a karaoke machine as a tax expense.

Then, as Evelyn is making a last-ditch attempt to save her business, Waymond’s body is suddenly possessed by a counterpart from one of near-infinite alternate realities. He tells her she’s the only person who can save the multiverse from a reality-destroying menace. And she still has to get her taxes done.

As alt-Waymond acknowledges, the multiverse’s precise mechanics are complex and not always logical. “Verse-jumpers” can use earpieces to puppet the bodies of their alternate selves, and they can osmose skills from counterparts in other worlds by performing pivotal actions that set their lives on different paths. (For unexplained reasons, most of these tasks are painful or gross, like getting paper cuts or eating chapstick.) The process opens a slight psychic link between the counterparts, and for verse-jumpers who push themselves too far, comprehending this range of infinite possibilities can lead to a devastating existential crisis.

Everything Everywhere’s multiverse opens the door to entertaining dream logic

The setup offers Kwan and Scheinert a chance to pinball between a host of mini-narratives and a truly dizzying number of colorful costume changes, and it justifies a series of eccentric martial arts sequences that essentially work on dream logic. Everything Everywhere’s fight scenes are more entertaining, more creative, and better-shot than those of many full-fledged action movies, including ones from the very cinematic franchises it’s clearly drawing on. (They’re far more fun than almost anything in the Marvel films made by the Russo brothers, who served as producers here.)

Yeoh’s main self is a pitch-perfect confused everywoman who can suddenly pull off incredible acrobatic feats tempered by goofy physical comedy, while her other personas showcase her effortless charisma. Quan shifts fluidly between his hapless primary-universe self and his hyper-competent alter-ego, with both tone and body language flipping in split-second transitions. Even Curtis, introduced as a snide bureaucrat, gets a menacing turn in one of her many personas.

Stephanie Hsu, Ke Huy Quan, Michelle Yeoh, and James Hong in Everything Everywhere All At Once

Everything Everywhere is full of intricate connections and Chekhov’s guns that cohere more on an aesthetic level than a narrative one. It’s constantly looping back to build extended multiverse vignettes from minor details earlier in the film, including jokes that range from mild to fairly crass. (This is a good time to mention that Kwan and Scheinert also directed Swiss Army Man, a film that starred Daniel Radcliffe as a flatulent corpse.) A few of these callbacks feel extraneous, and based on a Q&A session following the film’s SXSW premiere, that’s after at least one subplot was left on the cutting room floor. But they help sell the film’s humor by spinning cinematic references and throwaway gags — what if you put, like, everything on a bagel, man — into deadpan scenes delivered with visual flair.

What if you put, like, everything on a bagel

The dramatic elements still don’t always add up. Everything Everywhere’s sci-fi sequences can be written like they’re marking time between absurdities, peppered with expository dialogue that doesn’t gel with the more compelling and naturalistic exchanges elsewhere. The script is full of monologues about life and humanity that sound good in isolation but are shuffled around as abruptly as the film’s costumes, asserting character motivations that haven’t been well-established before that moment.

Even so, the relationship between Evelyn, Joy, Waymond, and (unexpectedly) Deirdre builds up to something sweet that stays just a hair away from being cloying. Everything Everywhere’s individual personas are largely archetypes, albeit archetypes that aren’t often seen in mainstream sci-fi movies. But the film treats them as complementary facets of a single complicated person rather than a plethora of separate entities. There’s no cheap ambiguity about whether any of the film’s events are happening — the multiverse definitely exists, and it contains people whose fingers are definitely hot dogs — but its array of worlds have the vibe of fantasies that highlight aspects of the characters’ core selves, making them more than gimmicks or weirdness for its own sake.

Stephanie Hsu in Everything Everywhere All At Once

This might be due less to the script than to the cast, who bring consistency to the most nonsensical scenarios. Quan gives Waymond a resilient vulnerability that comes through even when he’s dragging Evelyn around the multiverse. While Hsu gets less screen time as her original-universe character, she balances being viciously nihilistic and hopelessly lost as one of Joy’s alter egos. Deirdre is legitimately mean, but — like many real-world jerks — capable of kindness and affection.

And in a film evoking countless earlier movies about disaffected losers who discover they’re secretly heroes, Yeoh offers a poignant and magnetic take on the trope. Her protagonist is disappointed in life but still a functioning, mature human being surrounded by people who are flawed but ultimately decent. Evelyn’s plunge into the multiverse is foreshadowed by the way she navigates her multigenerational and multilingual family, her rapid-fire dialog switching between Mandarin, Cantonese, and English. One of Everything Everywhere’s running jokes is that its protagonist is literally the least talented possible version of herself, but the gaps between Evelyn’s selves never seem jarring — you can believe that a few decisions separate a beleaguered laundromat owner from a master chef or opera singer.

For all the bizarre stuff that’s thrown into Everything Everywhere, Kwan and Scheinert’s riskiest move is arguably picking a nearly 140-minute runtime for a comedy built around deliberate tonal whiplash, a potentially polarizing style of humor, and an exhausting pace. Everything Everywhere is a giant tangled yarn ball of a movie, and if it doesn’t work for you, that feeling will last for a very, very long time. If it does work, though, it might be one of the most charmingly ridiculous movies you see this year.

Everything Everywhere All At Once debuts in theaters on March 25th

Credit: Source link

Previous Post

Fully Robotic Surgery May Depend On Elon Musk’s Mission To Mars

Next Post

How to change your PlayStation username

New York Tech Editorial Team

New York Tech Editorial Team

New York Tech Media is a leading news publication that aims to provide the latest tech news, fintech, AI & robotics, cybersecurity, startups & leaders, venture capital, and much more!

Next Post
How to change your PlayStation username

How to change your PlayStation username

  • Trending
  • Comments
  • Latest
Meet the Top 10 K-Pop Artists Taking Over 2024

Meet the Top 10 K-Pop Artists Taking Over 2024

March 17, 2024
Panther for AWS allows security teams to monitor their AWS infrastructure in real-time

Many businesses lack a formal ransomware plan

March 29, 2022
Zach Mulcahey, 25 | Cover Story | Style Weekly

Zach Mulcahey, 25 | Cover Story | Style Weekly

March 29, 2022
10 Raunchy Movies on Netflix You Won’t Regret Watching

10 Raunchy Movies on Netflix You Won’t Regret Watching

May 20, 2024
How To Pitch The Investor: Ronen Menipaz, Founder of M51

How To Pitch The Investor: Ronen Menipaz, Founder of M51

March 29, 2022
Japanese Space Industry Startup “Synspective” Raises US $100 Million in Funding

Japanese Space Industry Startup “Synspective” Raises US $100 Million in Funding

March 29, 2022
Startups On Demand: renovai is the Netflix of Online Shopping

Startups On Demand: renovai is the Netflix of Online Shopping

2
Robot Company Offers $200K for Right to Use One Applicant’s Face and Voice ‘Forever’

Robot Company Offers $200K for Right to Use One Applicant’s Face and Voice ‘Forever’

1
Menashe Shani Accessibility High Tech on the low

Revolutionizing Accessibility: The Story of Purple Lens

1

Netgear announces a $1,500 Wi-Fi 6E mesh router

0
These apps let you customize Windows 11 to bring the taskbar back to life

These apps let you customize Windows 11 to bring the taskbar back to life

0
This bipedal robot uses propeller arms to slackline and skateboard

This bipedal robot uses propeller arms to slackline and skateboard

0
laptop on glass table

Automat-it Cuts Deployment Friction as Monce Scales AI Order Processing on AWS

April 13, 2026
Lee's Famous Recipe Chicken

Why Lee’s Famous Recipe Chicken Is Betting on Hi Auto to Quietly Rewire the Drive-Thru

April 9, 2026
computer generated image of letters

San Francisco Tribune Lists 11 HumanX Startups Moving AI Closer to the Operating Core

April 8, 2026
Impala CEO and Highrise AI CEO

The Industrialization of AI Infrastructure: What Impala and Highrise AI Reveal About the Next Scaling Frontier

April 7, 2026
Employee Time Tracking

What is an Employee Time Tracking Solution? A Definite Guide for 2026

March 31, 2026
Voltify founders

Voltify Raises $30 Million Seed Round as It Challenges $1 Trillion Rail Electrification Model

March 31, 2026

Recommended

laptop on glass table

Automat-it Cuts Deployment Friction as Monce Scales AI Order Processing on AWS

April 13, 2026
Lee's Famous Recipe Chicken

Why Lee’s Famous Recipe Chicken Is Betting on Hi Auto to Quietly Rewire the Drive-Thru

April 9, 2026
computer generated image of letters

San Francisco Tribune Lists 11 HumanX Startups Moving AI Closer to the Operating Core

April 8, 2026
Impala CEO and Highrise AI CEO

The Industrialization of AI Infrastructure: What Impala and Highrise AI Reveal About the Next Scaling Frontier

April 7, 2026

Categories

  • AI & Robotics
  • Benzinga
  • Cybersecurity
  • FinTech
  • New York Tech
  • News
  • Startups & Leaders
  • Venture Capital

Tags

AI AI QSRs Allseated Automat-it AWS B2B marketing Business CISO CISO Whisperer Collaborations Companies To Watch cryptocurrency Cybersecurity Entrepreneur Fetcherr Finance FINQ Fintech Funding Announcement hi-tech Hi Auto Impala Investing Investors investorsummit Israel israelitech Leaders LinkedIn Leaders Metaverse Mindset Minnesota omri hurwitz PointFive PR QSR Real Estate start- up startupnation Startups Startups On Demand Tech Tech leaders Unlimited Robotics VC
  • Contact Us
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms and conditions

© 2024 All Rights Reserved - New York Tech Media

No Result
View All Result
  • News
  • FinTech
  • AI & Robotics
  • Cybersecurity
  • Startups & Leaders
  • Venture Capital

© 2024 All Rights Reserved - New York Tech Media