A riveting, hilarious and startling self-portrait of the Unites States’ thorny political landscape - One Battle After Another is another crowning achievement for Paul Thomas Anderson. This near-masterpiece is thematically explosive, narratively gripping and masterfully acted by a cast at the top of their game. This is a political powder keg packed to the brim with razor sharp relevancy. For as ferociously as it puts America’s current political climate on blast, it never feels like forceful pointed commentary. Rather, PTA has written a timely story that fits perfectly into the country’s increasingly volatile state of affairs. At every turn, it effortlessly paints a sobering picture of “the land of the free”, because this is the United States’ terrifying reality. It’s also surprisingly funny, without undercutting its own politically charged heartbeat. The comedy plays similarly to Inherent Vice’s brand of paranoid humour, but paired with one of PTA’s most propulsive and power...
Benny Safdie and Dwayne Johnson make for the most unlikely but welcome director-actor pairing of the year, and the latter gives a performance that not only transforms him on screen, but his image for audiences. The massive movie star persona we're used to from him completely disappears and Johnson becomes one with Mark Kerr, the MMA fighter he plays in the film. Kerr is incredibly ferocious and determined, but sees losing as a non-option and can't quite cope with the idea of it, even when it's bound to happen for all athletes. Emily Blunt is also phenomenal as Dawn, Kerr's girlfriend, matching his anger and desire to be heard in many great scenes. The Smashing Machine , thanks to Safdie's brilliant directions, captures a feel beyond that of a three-act screenplay with actors reading dialogue, but rather feels like you're merely a fly on the wall inhabiting and moving through this space with the characters as you get to know them deeply and intimately. One of t...