Good new movies aren't hard to come by,Taboo Sex: Daughter in law, Sister in law, Mother in law (2025) even in a year as strange as 2020, and neither are bad ones. But it's not every week you stumble upon a film so baffling that you forget about "good" or "bad" completely, and know only that you need to talk about it immediately with anyone you can.
Wild Mountain Thyme, written and directed by John Patrick Shanley and based on one of his own stage plays, is one of those movies. It opens with voiceover narration by Christopher Walken — doing what sounds even to my untrained American ear like a terrible Irish accent — cheerfully proclaiming that he is dead. By the end of the movie, that line won't even rank as the fifth most perplexing thing about it.
But its weirdness creeps up on you. For much the film's run time, it stays at a low simmer. You might even assume everything is in order, if you aren't paying attention too closely. There's some business about a man named Anthony (Jamie Dornan), who's upset his father (Walken) won't leave the family farm to him, and about a woman named Rosemary (Emily Blunt), who owns the neighboring farm and is clearly in love with Anthony. We know from the opening narration that Tony, Walken's character, will die at some point, and from centuries of storytelling that Anthony and Rosemary are destined for some sort of romance, and indeed both of those things come to pass.
Actually listen, however, and you may start to notice that nothing about howany of this happens adds up to recognizable human behavior. Take the question of Anthony inheriting the farm: The reason Tony is reluctant to pass it on to him, as he explains in a roundabout conversation sprinkled with folksy turns of phrase, is that he worries Anthony has inherited his late mother's family's history of mental instability. The proof Tony lays out is that Anthony 1) likes to fish and 2) is unmarried. Instead, Tony wants to leave the property to his nephew Adam (Jon Hamm), a successful New York banker so spectacularly ill-suited for rural life that he drives up in a Rolls-Royce.
Maybe there's a universe in which this line of reasoning makes sense, but Wild Mountain Thymedoesn't find it. Nor can it explain why most of the sets, props, and costumes look like they're from decades ago, even though references to The Lion Kingon Broadway suggest we're somewhere in the vague present. (Its millennial hero uses a landline, and not even the cordless kind.) Or why the characters, who are in their 30s or older, seem to have the emotional maturity and lived experience of middle schoolers. Rosemary, in particular, remains stung by a minor betrayal that occurred between her and Anthony when they were all of eight years old.
No spoilers, but suffice it to say there's a line of dialogue that had me gasping with disbelief until I felt lightheaded
And we haven't even gotten to the scene that elevates Wild Mountain Thymefrom the ranks of the merely misguided to the spectacularly bizarre. No spoilers, but suffice it to say there's a line of dialogue that had me gasping with disbelief until I felt lightheaded, and that you will know it when you hear it. It's so unbelievable and so out of the blue that I wondered, briefly, if the entire film might be one elaborate joke. But if so, no one in the movie is tipping their hand. Blunt, Dornan, and the rest of the cast play their roles completely straight.
Eventually, it all becomes part of Wild Mountain Thyme's misshapen charm. A more grounded, more humane film might demand your emotional investment, and maybe end up crushing your heart or pissing you off. A more ostentatiously off-kilter film (like last year's Cats) might break your brain entirely. But watching Wild Mountain Thymefeels like reading one of those Harry Potter chapters written by a bot, or like watching one of those videos where actors speak gibberish in flawless American accents — it's familiar and alien all at once. As a romantic drama, it's total nonsense. But as an escape from reality, you could do worse.
Wild Mountain Thymeis now in theaters and on demand, including on Amazon, Vudu, and more.
Black bear in Glacier National Park refuses to leave its winter denCows could be the largest mammals left on Earth in 300 yearsBeyoncé's 'Cowboy Carter': Who are the featured Black country artists?Mysterious bowhead whales found singing over 180 different songsiOS 17.5 beta 1 is here: 3 new features coming to your iPhoneSolar eclipse 2024: Don't take photos of it with your phoneAlibaba invests a further $845 million in Lazada three months after last round · TechNodeBaidu launches SynClub, a social network populated by "AI friends" · TechNodeSpaceX flawlessly lands a rocket booster at sea after flying to spaceWordle today: The answer and hints for April 2World's longest penguin dive recorded by scientists in AntarcticaAmazon deals of the day: Shark FlexStyle, Apple Watch Series 9, Bissell Little Green, and moreGlobal smartphone shipments fell by 11% in Q2 · TechNodeThis is Tesla's new Model 3 'Ludicrous'LG deals: Get up to 34% off TVs, projectors, and soundbars at AmazonLyft offsets carbon emissions, but still relies on gasElon Musk's new plan involves a rocket and a party balloonDon’t like your DALLNetEase Music tests AI feature “Private DJ” · TechNodeSolar eclipse 2024: Don't take photos of it with your phone Android Auto gets split screen mode, always Heated fingerless gloves are perfect for your refrigerator of an office The 'Bans Off Our Bodies' day of action sees national marches for reproductive rights Dear Fitbit: How to stop me, a loyal user, switching to a new Apple Watch Uber adds electric vehicle ride option and delivery by autonomous robots in select cities Wordle today: Answer, hints for May 15 Wordle today: Here's the answer, hints for May 14 Ariana Grande shares a heartbreaking tribute to Mac Miller A dad's new credit card turned out horribly wrong Apple is reportedly testing USB The top 10 most streamed TV shows of the week feature a lot of true crime Google I/O 2022: Pixel Buds Pro confirmed, Pixel 7 and Pixel Tablet teased When will your iPad become obsolete? Sonos is adding Voice Control to its speakers Anna Kendrick finally explains her years How to see where 5G is available near you using Speedtest on iOS What is a lunar eclipse? Everything to know about the blood moon. Eric Trump said something super anti Fighting snakes fall through bedroom ceiling, and that's enough internet for today Elon Musk puts Twitter deal 'on hold' due to fake accounts report
2.7785s , 10132.8671875 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【Taboo Sex: Daughter in law, Sister in law, Mother in law (2025)】,Unobstructed Information Network