Score: 4.5 / 5
The most aggressively weird movie in a long time, the latest from Daniels is a doozy. It begins as one thing, shifts into something wildly different, and by the halfway point is unrecognizable as a coherent film. And then, by the end, I found myself so awash in feelings and sensations I've never felt in a film before that I stood with my friend outside the cinema and we just giggled and cried and kept shrugging our shoulders because we just couldn't figure out what we were feeling. Everything Everywhere All at Once is, I promise you, not like you might expect. No summary or synopsis can do it justice. I'm not even sure watching it can do it justice. Think of it like an SNL skit -- about everything and about nothing at the same time, so specific and so absurd at once -- pulled into a two-and-a-half-hour arthouse genre flick. Then you'll start to grasp what's really going on here. Maybe.
It begins with the sardonic wit of reality, as first-generation immigrant Evelyn Wang (Michelle Yeoh) struggles to keep her laundromat afloat. They are under audit by the IRS after having incorrectly filed taxes, and her husband Waymond is passively trying to serve her divorce papers; her daughter Joy is pushing for her family to accept her girlfriend, and her typically patriarchal father Gong Gong has recently arrived for a visit from China. Evelyn's life is a bit chaotic at the moment, and it only gets worse when they visit their auditor, Dierdre Beaubeirdre (a hilarious Jamie Lee Curtis). I wondered how long the movie would dwell on this; its tone suggests something a bit more commercially approachable than David Foster Wallace's The Pale King but with the same sour humor.
It doesn't last long here, as shortly after arriving at their appointment, Waymond is seemingly possessed by a Waymond from another universe. He tells a fantastic story about the other universes, all of which are parallel, and all of which are now in jeopardy because the daughter Joy from his universe has created a black hole, possibly out of spite. It's up to Evelyn to save everyone. But she doesn't have the time or the desire to help. The hilarity of her situation is rather short-lived, at first, because the evil Joy's minions appear and start attacking. Evelyn must "hop" between universes to learn skills and knowledge from alternate Evelyns to fight back. Thankfully she can draw on an Evelyn who excels at mixed martial arts and even an Evelyn with long slappy noodle hands; with all these extra experiences and abilities, she gets spinning a lot, questioning what she thought she knew about her life, the possible lives she could have led, and the value of her family relationships.
As we hop between universes, I was pleased to note that the film is utterly original in its exploration of the multiverse, at a time when this will be the dominant sci-fi trope and will surely be beaten to death by the MCU and DCEU. It is original, that is, even while actively and hilariously nodding at other films and franchises. For example, there is an alternative universe modeled off Ratatouille, ones like The Matrix, even one uncannily like 2001: A Space Odyssey. In one, Evelyn is a movie star earning awards and fame; in one she is a rock watching a wasteland. Even the real world -- most of which takes place in an IRS building -- becomes a strange place in which enemies fight with kung fu and moves out of Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon or even, yes, Shang-Chi. The cubicles become an endless hallway of doldrums that contain an endless supply of bizarre weapons, culminating in usage of an "auditor of the year" award becoming a butt plug. The cinematography and editing change with each universe; sometimes even the aspect ratio changes. The film handles its internal chaos beautifully so that even as things exceeded my conscious comprehension, I could follow its emotional lines through to their payoffs. I'd like to revisit the film sometime, or at least read its screenplay, to appreciate and understand it better. I know I missed significant portions of dialogue as I held my splitting sides.
Michelle Yeoh is amazing, and I teared up more than once watching her masterfully guide the film to its sticking places. Her action-movie prowess is always stunning, but here we can really see what she does with a feature-length feature that very much relies on her role to convey human experience. And she delivers all of them plus some! Using dry wit and biting humor she embraces the comedic aspects even as she uses almost imperceptible facial muscles to convey entire manifestos with a single look. Her talent shines on the top tier, and this is the kind of movie that will help people recognize her brilliance.
No less amazing is Stephanie Hsu, who plays Joy, a role I initially thought little of but who I think probably carries equal emotional weight in the film. Joy's thematic locus rests on an otherwise undefined but strongly emphasized generational and cultural divide between Evelyn, her father, and her offspring. Joy's queerness and feminism are foreign to Evelyn, who feels growing disappointment that Joy isn't embracing the opportunities Evelyn's hard work has made possible. Similarly, Evelyn's lifestyle and values are a far cry from her father's (who is played by the wonderfully voiced James Hong), and these restive tensions come to a head when the black hole -- spoiler alert: it's an everything bagel -- spirals its way into our universe. Thankfully, according to the film's apparent logic, the destructive void of generational disconnect and regret and disappointment can be ended when we choose to love and accept and learn from each other, especially those of us in different generations. I'm not sure if that's the main message of this film, or really a valid one, but it's the one that stuck out to me after a single viewing and I'm running with it for now.
Come for Michelle Yeoh. Stay for the chaos. Enjoy the novelty and beauty and hilarity and weirdness along the way. It's a unique and fabulous experience for your senses.