Bugonia

Bugonia                4 ½ stars

If you have ever seen a Yorgos Lanthimos movie you know you are in for something bizarre and odd. The Greek filmmaker also typically has something to say about the state of our society. Sometimes they can seem absurd, such as The Lobster where each person is turned into an animal if they don’t find their soulmate, or Poor Things involving transplanting a baby’s brain into an adult body. Sometimes they involve extreme torture and violence like The Killing of a Sacred Deer. In the case of Bugonia you get both. And some commentary on societal issues like conspiracy theories, our dependence on drugs and a collapsing society. It starts out as a conventional story. We see Michelle Fuller (Emma Stone of Birdman and La La Land), a CEO of a large pharmaceutical firm that develops miracle drugs. She is an expert on corporate double speak, making promises to the public and advocating for a family friendly culture for the employees as long as it doesn’t affect their work. Then one day she is kidnapped at her luxury home by two young men who tranquilize her and carry her off to the basement of their isolated house. (But first they have to shave off all her hair while she is unconscious and cover her in some white lotion.) It seems that Teddy (Jesse Plemons of The Power of the Dog and Killers of the Flower Moon), who works in packaging at Fuller’s company, has been down a rabbit hole on the internet for years and is convinced that aliens from space have infiltrated earth and are ready to take over the planet from humans. He believes that Fuller is one of the aliens disguised as human. He wants to get a confession from her and have her contact her spaceship to negotiate a peace deal and save humanity. He also holds a grudge against her because of some experimental procedures conducted on his mother that did not go well. Helping him in this quest is his somewhat dimwitted cousin, Donny (newcomer Aidan Delbis) who worships Teddy. This is where things may get tough for some viewers to watch. Fuller must endure being chained as a prisoner and tortured by electric shock while she does all she can to try to tell Teddy that he has it all wrong. She is just a human person trying to do what is right as a corporate CEO. But there is no convincing Teddy. He has done his research and is convinced that she is in fact an alien and he must save Earth. Fuller thinks he is crazy and must match each point coming from Teddy. The scope of the movie is mostly confined to these three characters and their interactions in the house or the headquarters of the resistance. Both Stone and Plemons give the roles everything they can, putting in some incredible performances. Emma Stone was all in for the movie after seeing the script despite the grueling scenes and losing her hair on screen. (Alien hair is a communication device in Teddy’s conspiracy filled world.) Lanthimos’ film, Bugonia says a lot about our world today, with the effect of the internet, inequality among classes and distrust everywhere. The film goes to some extreme places you wouldn’t expect, but maybe that is what should be expected from Lanthimos, who has put some crazy ideas on screen before. This is the fourth movie where he has cast Stone in a lead role, the others being The Favourite, Poor Things and Kinds of Kindness. These two obviously have a good working relationship. Plemons shows us a character filled with rage, lost in his misguided notions coming from the internet. Delbis who is autistic shows us someone who is not crazy but is taken advantage of by someone he trusts. Lanthimos brings them all together and once again creates a strange and troubling world out of his imagination.