Current:Home > Contact'A Different Man' review: Sebastian Stan stuns in darkly funny take on identity -Thrive Capital Insights
'A Different Man' review: Sebastian Stan stuns in darkly funny take on identity
View
Date:2025-04-19 14:37:30
Sebastian Stan’s face literally falls off in the new dark comedy “A Different Man,” with the aim of questioning who we all are underneath.
Writer/director Aaron Schimberg’s fabulously thought-provoking and searingly funny flick (★★★½ out of four; rated R; in select theaters now, nationwide Friday) digs into themes of identity, empathy, self-awareness and beauty with amusing eccentricity and a pair of revelatory performances. Marvel superhero Stan is stellar as a disfigured man with neurofibromatosis given a miracle “cure” that makes his life hell, and Adam Pearson, a British actor living with the rare disorder in real life, proves a refreshing and movie-stealing delight.
Edward (Stan) is a New York actor who does cheesy corporate inclusivity training videos, where employees learn to treat everyone with respect. It doesn’t happen in his real life: He’s mocked, laughed at or just roundly dismissed because of his facial tumors.
Join our Watch Party!Sign up to receive USA TODAY's movie and TV recommendations right in your inbox
The only person who isn’t a jerk to Edward is his flirty next-door neighbor, aspiring playwright Ingrid (Renate Reinsve), and they strike up an awkward friendship where she sort of digs him and he doesn’t have a clue what to do.
Need a break? Play the USA TODAY Daily Crossword Puzzle.
Edward’s condition has worsened to the point where he can’t see out of one eye. He takes his doctor’s advice to sign up for an experimental drug and is given a mask of his original face to wear for a sense of normalcy once the medication begins to work. Oh, it does work, exceedingly well – the body-horror sequence where the tumors come off his face is particularly gnarly – and he's left looking pretty handsome, ready to be a new man, and Ingrid overhears him telling people that Edward is “dead.”
As years pass, he becomes a star real estate agent now calling himself Guy who reeks of confidence. But while the artifice has changed, internally he’s still an insecure mess. That comes out when he discovers that Ingrid has written a play about Edward's life.
Guy wears his mask to the auditions and gets the part, partly because Ingrid feels a connection with him. But he also meets Oswald (Pearson), who looks exactly like he used to but the new guy is beloved as the gregarious, effusive life of every party. Oswald wants to be his friend yet the tense situation veers dicey when Guy becomes jealous, winds up losing his role to Oswald and grows violently unhinged.
Thanks to prosthetics designer Mike Marino – nominated for an Oscar for “Coming 2 America” (and likely getting another nod for this) – Stan is unrecognizable and plays Edward as aloof and shy, tapping back into all that once his macho facade crumbles as Guy.
In the better of his two transformative roles this awards season (though quite good as Donald Trump in "The Apprentice"), Stan is wonderfully off-kilter in "Different Man" and it’s great to see his dour personality contrasted with the lovable Pearson's. A veteran of English TV and the Scarlett Johansson film “Under the Skin,” the newcomer pops with innate charisma and friendliness as it becomes clear Oswald is the guy Edward wanted and thought he would be, not this other Guy.
While the ending loses steam as “Different Man” gets in its own bizarre head, the film maintains a certain heady, psychological trippiness. Having Edward and Oswald be almost mirror images of one another adds a mind-bending slant to an already deep tale that tackles a society that often mistreats someone considered “other” and holds the makeover in high regard.
With strangely thoughtful panache and a helping of absurdity, Schimberg makes us rethink how we look at people and ourselves alike – and who’s to blame when we don’t like the view.
veryGood! (6847)
Related
- Meet 11-year-old skateboarder Zheng Haohao, the youngest Olympian competing in Paris
- Dua Lipa and Callum Turner's PDA-Filled Daytime Outing May Just Blow Your Mind
- Oklahoma teachers mistakenly got up to $50,000 in bonuses. Now they have to return the money.
- Massachusetts man shot dead after crashing truck, approaching officer with knife
- Jury selection set for Monday for ex-politician accused of killing Las Vegas investigative reporter
- Biogen scraps controversial Alzheimer's drug Aduhelm
- Oregon decriminalized drugs in 2020. Now officials are declaring a fentanyl state of emergency
- Tennessee, Virginia AGs suing NCAA over NIL-related recruiting rules with Vols under investigation
- Tony Hawk drops in on Paris skateboarding and pushes for more styles of sport in LA 2028
- The mystery of Amelia Earhart has tantalized for 86 years: Why it's taken so long to solve
Ranking
- Taylor Swift Cancels Austria Concerts After Confirmation of Planned Terrorist Attack
- The Federal Reserve holds interest rates steady but signals rate cuts may be coming
- Minnesota man accused of assembling an arsenal to attack police is sentenced to nearly 7 years
- Music from Memphis’ Stax Records, Detroit’s Motown featured in online show
- Romantasy reigns on spicy BookTok: Recommendations from the internet’s favorite genre
- Grading every college football coaching hire this offseason from best to worst
- Most-Shopped Celeb-Recommended Items This Month- Kyle Richards, Madelyn Cline, Alicia Keys, and More
- 2024 NHL All-Star Game weekend: Live stream, TV, draft, skills competition, rosters
Recommendation
Jay Kanter, veteran Hollywood producer and Marlon Brando agent, dies at 97: Reports
Days of Darkness: How one woman escaped the conspiracy theory trap that has ensnared millions
Rita Moreno, Debbie Allen, Ariana DeBose of 'West Side Story' honor the original Anita, Chita Rivera
OK, Barbie, let's go to a Super Bowl party. Mattel has special big game doll planned
Louisiana high court temporarily removes Judge Eboni Johnson Rose from Baton Rouge bench amid probe
UK lawmakers are annoyed that Abramovich’s frozen Chelsea funds still haven’t been used for Ukraine
'Swift Alert' app helps Taylor Swift fans keep up with Eras Tour livestreams
How U.S. Marshals captured pro cyclist Moriah Mo Wilson's killer