After the
Hunt, Good Boy, and Blue
Moon
And filmmaking
so inept that it transcends sexual politics
After the Hunt is a 2025 psychological thriller. Luca Guadagnino directs. His previous films include Call Me By Your Name and Queer. The title After the Hunt is an allusion to a quote attributed to Otto von Bismarck. "People never lie so much as before an election, during a war, or after the hunt." Nora Garrett, a first-time screenwriter, wrote the screenplay in a workshop. Garrett was intrigued by the disconnect between a person's interior life and the persona that one must present in order to be successful. The main character, Alma, a Yale professor pursuing tenure, has "has spent her whole life cordoning off pieces of herself in order to reach this apex … as soon as she's there … circumstances … occur that would make it so that she could no longer successfully keep those other parts of her away from the identity that she projects out into the world."
After the
Hunt stars Julia
Roberts (Alma), Ayo Edebiri (Maggie), Andrew Garfield (Hank), Michael Sthulbarg
(Frederik), and Chloe Sevigny (Kim). Lio Mehiel, a woman who identifies as a
man, plays Alex, Maggie's lover. Mehiel has undergone double mastectomy as part
of her self-identification as male. Her mastectomy scars are on display in After
the Hunt. In an unnecessary scene, she removes her shirt to expose them.
Alma's desire
for tenure is complicated when her pet student, Maggie, accuses Hank, Alma's
friend and partner in extramarital flirtation, of sexual assault. Exactly what
constitutes "sexual assault" is never specified. Hank may or may not
have kissed or fondled or penetrated Maggie. After the Hunt does not
dramatize what transpired between Maggie and Hank, so viewers never learn
whether Maggie or Hank is telling the truth.
After the
Hunt opened in the US
on October 10, 2025. Its runtime is 139 minutes. The film has a 39% positive
professional reviewer score at Rotten Tomatoes, and a 36% amateur
reviewer score. Google reviews, by amateur reviewers, include many more
one-star reviews than reviews with any other score. After the Hunt is a
significant box office bomb. It has made a measly $5 million, nowhere near
estimated production costs.
In an October
13 New York Times op ed, "The New Julia Roberts Movie Seethes With
Anti-Woke Resentment," Michelle Goldberg writes that After the Hunt depicts
"the backlash against self-righteous progressivism cresting, and taking on
sanctimonious college students seemed, at least in some circles, like a brave
provocation … Now, at a moment of ferocious federal government repression of
the campus left, After the Hunt is a bit of a silly anachronism."
Below, I'll
provide a summary of the film's plot, including spoilers, and then my own
thoughts about whether or not Goldberg is correct, and After the Hunt is
worth paying attention to because it "seethes with anti-woke
resentment."
Though After
the Hunt never makes clear whether Professor Hank assaulted student Maggie
or not, the film seems to take sides in its title sequence. Woody Allen
famously begins his films with white letters in Windsor font on a black
background; see here.
Guadagnino does the same. Is he taking sides? Reporters asked Guadagnino this
question; in a
long, ambiguous reply, he declined to answer directly, keeping to his
film's refusal to take a clear stand.
Director
Guadagnino, cinematographer Malik Hassan Sayeed, and production designer
Stefano Baisi exerted a great deal of energy to create a visually lush movie.
For just one example, Baisi and
Guadagnino imagined a
multi-generational history behind Alma and Frederik's apartment, and placed
specific pieces of furniture and books in the apartment, though viewers barely
see the books. "Every item in their study and every book was selected in
relation to the characters … It’s all very specific."
Two scenes in
the film take place in a New Haven Indian restaurant. The film was shot on nine
soundstages and a backlot at London's Shepperton Studios. "The Indian
restaurant in the movie was built on the backlot," Baisi explains,
"complete with sidewalks, tarmac, signs, the facade of the building.
Everything is an exact replica of a real place in New Haven, which we measured
and photographed. Rather than filming at Yale, "we built a very large
quad. We used real iron for the fence, wood for the benches, and real grass. We
did molds and used concrete to create the stone sidewalks. And the trees – part
of them were built with Styrofoam-type material, which we painted."
After the
Hunt opens in Alma and
Frederik's apartment. The lighting is dim and will remain dim throughout the
film. At times the lighting is so dim that the viewer cannot make out facial
expressions. Alma is a Yale professor, and Frederik is a psychotherapist, and
their apartment communicates their elite status. The walls are rich wood
paneling. The furniture is expensive-looking.
Alma is hosting
both her professorial colleagues and her students. The difference in status and
power between the guests is consciously muddied. Both professors and students
strive to pretend as if everyone were equal. Alcohol and obscenities flow
freely. Hank, a professor, is dressed in jeans. He places his feet on furniture
and is touchy-feely with females. Alma wears mostly all-white clothing
throughout the film. Hank and Alma share a cigarette.
Frederik brings
in a tart he has made. When they are alone, Frederik tells Alma that she
chooses to mentor students who worship her. "Is Maggie brilliant, or do
you like her because she thinks you are brilliant?"
Maggie goes to
Alma's bathroom, and opens a cabinet. She finds an envelope, opens it, examines
the contents, and keeps one sheet of paper.
Alma kisses
Maggie. Hank and Maggie leave the party together.
Alma vomits
loudly into a toilet. She will do this multiple times throughout the film. She
also takes what looks like prescription medication.
Alma is shown
in class. She is addressing Foucault's concept of the panopticon.
"Panopticon" comes from Greek words meaning all seeing. Alma is
telling her students that modern societies observe and discipline the
citizenry.
Frederik texts
Alma that he is making cassoulet for dinner. She ignores him. Hank texts Alma
to invite her for drinks. Alma accepts Hank's offer and misses dinner with
Frederik. Hank kisses Alma but leaves after drinking and Alma is left to pay.
When Alma
arrives at her apartment, Maggie is waiting for her in the hall. Maggie tells
Alma that after her party, Hank walked her home and sexually assaulted her.
Maggie refuses to provide any details, so neither Alma nor the audience knows
exactly what Maggie means by "sexual assault."
Alma enters her
apartment. Frederik says that Alma missed the cassoulet. Alma claims that she
was late because she was working, though in fact she was with Hank. Frederik
caresses Alma. Alma pulls away. Hank asks if anything has happened. Alma lies
and says "No."
Alma and Hank
meet at Tandoor, a New Haven Indian restaurant with mirrored walls. As they
speak, the viewer sees them and also their reflections. This is all meant to be
very deep and symbolic. What is real? Their corporeal selves, or their
reflections in the mirrored walls?
Hank is wearing
a denim shirt and a rag wool sweater. He orders a large amount of food and eats
with gusto, often with his mouth open. He is a man of big appetites, the film
is telling us. Hank says that he didn't assault Maggie; rather, he caught her
cheating and plagiarizing and wanted to talk to her about that. Of course a
professor walking a student home after a party late and night, while he is
drunk, is not the ideal time to discuss cheating and plagiarism.
A complicating
issue: Maggie's parents donate large sums of money to Yale.
Alma meets with
a dean. He offers her a drink of Jameson whiskey. He says he doesn't like the
Laphroaig he keeps in his office for show, and prefers the less expensive drink
– this detail provides more support for the film's "appearance vs reality"
theme. He announces a formal inquiry. Alma attends a book talk entitled,
"The Future of Jihadism is Female." Later, at her apartment, she
retrieves the envelope she keeps in the bathroom, realizes something is
missing, and burns the entire envelope and its contents. Yale fires Hank. Hank
says that Maggie ruined his life.
Maggie and Alma
meet in Alma's kitchen. Frederik walks in and out of the kitchen repeatedly,
while playing loud rock music. Frederik torments Maggie with the loud music and
snotty remarks.
Alma meets with
Kim, a psychotherapist at Yale. While Kim is in the bathroom, Alma rifles
through Kim's purse. Later, on campus, Alma will steal a prescription pad page
from Kim. Alma does this in order to illegally purchase opioids.
Maggie tells
her tale to the campus newspaper.
Frederik is
shown watching internet porn. He complains to Alma that they don't have sex.
Alma has repeatedly rejected Frederik emotionally; apparently she also rejects
him physically. Alma also rejects his cassoulet.
The piece of
paper Maggie stole from Alma's bathroom cabinet is a newspaper article. Maggie
is shown reading it. It is about a man Alma had accused of sexual assault when
she, Alma, was fifteen years old.
Alma is shown
teaching her philosophy seminar. She is mean to the students and they are
fearful of her. She browbeats a student for thinking in modern day, politically
correct terms while reading about an incident from the story of Ulysses in the
court of Phaeacian king Alcinous. Ulysses is traveling incognito. A minstrel
sings of the Trojan War. Ulysses recognizes the minstrel's song as being about
himself, and he weeps, thus blowing his cover and revealing his true identity.
A disciplinary
committee calls in Alma. She has stolen a prescription sheet from Kim, and her
attempt to gain tenure is suspended. This passage is alluded to in the film for
the same reason that Alma and Hank ate at Tandoor restaurant, with its mirrored
walls.
Alma confronts
Maggie and is verbally abusive. She unleashes a tirade against Woke culture on
campus. You are mediocre, Alma says. You plagiarize. You want trigger warnings
and you always want to be comfortable. Not everything is supposed to be
comfortable. You are privileged and yet needy. Maggie slaps Alma.
Alma retreats
to a dingy apartment she rents on New Haven's Wharf. She finds Hank in the
apartment. We are to assume that he is now homeless. Alma had given him a key
to this place, her secret hideout, months previously and never retrieved the
key. Hank and Alma kiss. At first the kiss is consensual, but Alma wants Hank
to stop, and he does not. She pushes him away. He leaves the apartment,
barefoot, and not wearing any pants.
On the Yale
campus, students surround Alma. Maggie has spread negative reports about Alma.
The students want revenge. Alma falls to the ground.
Alma is in a
hospital room. Frederik is beside her bed. He tells her that she has several
perforated ulcers. Alma tells Frederik that when she was fifteen, she had a
crush on one of her father's friends. He responded to her, but later he dumped
her for another woman. In revenge, she alleged that he assaulted her. Then she
withdrew the accusation. Years later, he committed suicide and she feels
responsible. Frederik tells her that she was not responsible. She says that she
still loves the man. Frederik says that he loves Alma. Alma does not
reciprocate.
It is now five
years after the main action of the film. Alma has gotten tenure. Hank is making
money in politics. Alma and Frederik are still together. Maggie is happy in her
life. The end.
After the
Hunt stinks so bad
staff have to spray theaters with Febreze after every showing.
In 1994, David
Mamet wrote and directed a movie, Oleanna. In that film, Carol, a
student, accuses John, her professor, of sexual harassment. The film shows you
everything that transpires between John and Carol. Mamet's film is, as one
would expect from a Pulitzer-Prize-winning author, masterfully written and directed.
I disagreed with what I took to be the film's point – that the real problem we
should be paying attention to is false or ambiguous accusations of harassment
from overreacting, power-drunk females. I recognize that false accusations
occur, but I think the bigger problem is male-on-female violation. Even so, I'd
have to give Oleanna at least four out of five stars because it is well-made.
After the
Hunt doesn't stink
because of its politics. It is too cowardly and too incoherent to advance any
politics. After the Hunt stinks because of a more catastrophic cultural
trend. After the Hunt is a massive failure of storytelling. Differences
in politics come and go, but when some of our most celebrated and
well-remunerated storytellers have no idea that they are marketing a train
wreck as clanky as this, and these train wrecks are rewarded over and over,
that's a sign of something really wrong with society.
Was it the
early 2000s that this trend began? When the films that won the Best Picture
award at the Oscars were movies that few people liked, and even fewer people
saw? Recent celebrated films that insisted that they were all about big ideas
that society really needed to hear, but were actually films that couldn't tell
a coherent story include The Brutalist, Eddington, and One Battle
after Another. After the Hunt has not been elevated by critics as have the
others in this category. Why? it offers some weak-tea criticism of Woke. Folks
like Michelle Goldberg insist that After the Hunt is a right-wing movie,
so they hate it.
Michelle
Goldberg should have saved her thunder. After the Hunt is the cinematic
version of the Gish Gallop. The Gish Gallop is a logical fallacy. The speaker
vomits up a series of truths, half-truths, and lies that have no logical
connection to each other. No point leads to any other point. The Gish Gallop
runs rampant on the internet, where there is little to no moderation, and
anyone with a grab-bag of talking points can think that he has a coherent
narrative. The Gish Gallop is the perfect logical fallacy for our era of short
attention spans and speaker-friendly lies posing as cold, hard truth. Everyone
involved in After the Hunt seems utterly sincere. The problem is they
ignored the real trees, and painted Styrofoam to look like trees. We all need
fact-checkers to make sure our grab-bags don't contain counterfeit currency.
Some of the
film's grab-bag of unconnected, implausible, pseudo-facts:
Why did the
film make Alma a German-speaking Swede? She had the affair with the German pedo
when she was fifteen. That's well after fossilizes. Alma should have had a
German accent. She did not.
Alma stores her
most precious mementos in the toilet paper cabinet of her bathroom? No.
Maggie's last
name is Resnick. Resnick is an Ashkenazi name. Ayo Edebiri is plainly the
daughter of a Nigerian father, that is, not Jewish.
Hank is
immediately fired from Yale, and rendered homeless, because one student, whom
he has caught cheating and plagiarizing, makes an unsubstantiated accusation.
On what planet does this happen? When I was at Indiana University, a professor
and the university both publicly acknowledged, as part of their lawsuit, that
that professor forcibly fondled and kissed an unwilling victim and they kept
him teaching students in class. It took years, dozens of accusations, and
expensive legal action to terminate this professor.
In the New
York Times' comments section, a recent Yale grad wrote, "There were
multiple instances in my own department of graduate students accusing the
faculty of inappropriate behavior … the student was either bullied out of the
department or ignored with little or no consequences for faculty." I
witnessed similar events when I was a professor in recent years and students
came to me with complaints. Overt harassment was excused by higher-ups. The
bottom line is power. If the accused is someone who provides the university
with a commodity that benefits the university, the university will, all other
factors being equal, protect the accused.
Alma, the film
tells us, has multiple perforated ulcers. She is also an alcoholic and an
opioid addict. Yet she is beautiful, poised, and able to maintain a
high-powered Ivy League career. This is not medically possible.
Toss this
grab-bag of implausible facts into a series of sensationalized scenes meant to
scratch contemporary itches. The filmmakers believe that they are creating a
film that addresses current headlines. Alma steals prescription pad pages!
Married but loveless Frederik pleasures himself while watching internet porn!
Hank jumps on Alma, testing the concept of consent! Alex shows off her
mastectomy scars! None of these sensationalized scenes serve a throughline
narrative because there is no throughline narrative.
Do we really
have to drag filmmakers back to high school English class? A storyteller begins
with a compelling, rounded character who wants something she doesn't have. As
the old-timer storytellers say, "You drive your character up a tree and
throw rocks at him." You erect barriers between your character and what he
wants. Gone with the Wind is 1,037 pages long. One page one, Scarlett
O'Hara wants Ashley Wilkes. On page 1,037, she doesn't have Ashley Wilkes, and,
furthermore, she realizes that wanting him was pretty foolish and
self-sabotaging. Everything that happens in the intervening 1,037 pages serves
that single line of narrative. Hamlet must avenges his father's murder. Period.
One sentence!
Robert McKee, a
masterful teacher of storytelling skill, tells his many students
that they must be able to convey the gist of their story in one sentence. That
isn't just important for an "elevator pitch," so that the next time
you are in an elevator with Steven Spielberg, you can convince him to turn your
novel into a movie. That's important for the writer. If your story can't be
reduced to one or two sentences, chances are you aren't writing a story; you
are, rather, jotting down a series of thoughts – a Gish Gallap – that aren't
gelling into that powerful machine, a real story.
There's plenty
onscreen in After the Hunt that, with the same cast, the same set
design, the same snarky rants against Woke and also the rants against the
patriarchy and white supremacy could have made for a really good film.
Alma, an
alcoholic, opioid addict, and ulcer sufferer, struggles to get tenure. There's
your movie.
Hank, a
charming rogue who breaks the rules of scholarly tradition, navigates a false
or even true allegation of sexual assault. There's your movie.
Frederik, a
doormat of a man, who takes on roles most frequently assumed by women – he
cooks, he massages, he encourages, he adores – stays with a woman who not only
plainly does not love him, but who also carries on an on-again-off-again affair
with Hank, a younger, hotter colleague. Bingo. A movie.
To make any of
the above movies you'd have to have something more than a TikTok-sized
attention span and a bagful of true, partially true, or utterly false takes on
popular culture and current events. You'd have to have patience and care and a
politics-transcending commitment to the integrity of the story you are telling.
Storytelling is
essential to the human experience. It's how we, without being physically
intimate, touch each other most intimately. I remain moved by stories I heard
decades ago. Stories changed my life. What does it say about our society that
so many films lately, especially "prestige" films like After the
Hunt, botch the most basic element – a coherent narrative? Nothing good,
I'm afraid.
All is not
lost. Please consider spending your movie-going dollars on two new films. Good
Boy is a 2025 horror movie starring a dog. I'm not into horror films, but I
am into dogs, so I had to see Good Boy. The film is short, only 73
minutes. It's low-budget. There are no famous actors. Director and co-writer
Ben Leonberg has no previous feature film credits. He filmed Good Boy in
his own house using his own dog over the course of three years. It took so long
because Indy, the dog, had a limited attention span to perform on camera before
he wanted treats, tennis balls, and couch time.
Good Boy is scary, but I think even kids, if
their parents are with them, could watch it and be okay. Good Boy has a
surprise, twist ending that upends the entire movie. Good Boy becomes
more than just a spooky story starring an utterly gorgeous dog who gives,
truly, one of the top performances of the year. Good Boy tackles one of
the monsters we all have to face, eventually. Many viewers report bursting into
tears – good tears – at the end of Good Boy when they realize how truly
deep and utterly human this film is. As a YouTube commenter put it, "If
you have a dog, watch this. I'm dead inside and even I teared up at the
end." It is remarkable to me that one of the best stories released in
theaters this year came from a nobody in the film industry working with almost
no budget and just a stunningly beautiful dog.
Blue Moon is the second film I want you to support
by buying a ticket. Blue Moon is a biopic about lyricist Lorenz
"Larry" Hart (1895 – 1943). Hart gave us such classics as "Blue
Moon," "I wish I Were in Love Again," and "The Lady Is a
Tramp." Hart wrote one of my favorite lyrics:
When
love congeals
It
soon reveals
The
faint aroma of performing seals
The
double-crossing of a pair of heels
I
wish I were in love again
Sinatra swings
it here.
Blue Moon is directed by Richard Linklater. The
literate, profound, sometimes funny, sometimes heart-breaking, but always
razor-sharp script is by Robert Kaplow. The cast includes Ethan Hawke (Hart),
Andrew Scott (Richard Rodgers), Margaret Qualley (Elizabeth Weiland), Bobby
Cannavale (Eddie, The Bartender), Patrick Kennedy (EB White), Simon Delaney
(Oscar Hammerstein II), Cillian Sullivan (Stephen Sondheim), and John Doran
(Weegee).
Hart was a
tortured genius. He was short, only five feet tall, balding, alcoholic,
depressive, and probably gay, although he did propose marriage to two women,
both of whom rejected him. So, who wants to watch a biopic about this guy? Me,
and I'm so glad I did. Most of Blue Mon consists of Hart, monologuing at
the bar in Sardi's restaurant. Sardi's is a famous theater hangout. Hart
delivers his monologues to anyone whose ear he can bend.
All of the
action takes place the night of the 1943 opening of Oklahoma! Lyricist
Hart and composer Richard Rodgers had been partners since 1919. They
collaborated on twenty-eight musicals and co-wrote five hundred songs. Hart's
personal problems came between them. Hart would disappear for days at a time.
He was an alcoholic.
Oklahoma! was Rodgers' first collaboration with
lyricist Oscar Hammerstein II. Oklahoma! was a very different musical
than Rodgers and Hart had worked on. It integrated story and musical numbers
more tightly, but there was more than that. Hammerstein was a very different
person than Hart. He would go on to write lyrics that cynics would dismiss as
"corny" but that fans would embrace as "warm,"
"inspirational," and even, in the case of "You've Got to be
Taught," "ethical." Hart, on the other hand, was a clever man
given to a jaundiced view of the human condition. His song "To Keep My
Love Alive," for example, describes a woman killing one lover after
another. Rodgers had invited Hart to work with him on Oklahoma! but Hart
declined. He felt no sympathy for a musical about "cowboys." Oklahoma!
became a huge success from its opening night to this day, eighty-two years
later.
In Blue
Moon, Hart recognizes that his style of art is on the decline, and Rodgers
and Hammerstein's star is rising. There's another heartache for Larry. He is
obsessed with Elizabeth Weiland, a young woman affiliated with Yale university.
Elizabeth "loves" Larry as a mentor who can help her theater career,
but she feels no romantic love for a physically unattractive, self-loathing,
gay man more than twice her age.
Fans of Blue
Moon want Ethan Hawke to win an Academy Award. Yes, his performance is
impressive, but for this viewer the secondary characters light up the screen.
Andrew Scott is stunning as Richard Rodgers. Scott conveys Rodgers' genuine
respect for and gratitude to Hart, but also his refusal to continue tolerating
a colleague's erratic and self-destructive behavior. And there's more. Rodgers
acknowledges that it's no longer the Roaring Twenties. It's the middle of World
War II, and people need musicals that will uplift them, as Oklahoma! is
doing. Rodgers tells Hart that his clever cynicism is not as smart as Hart
thinks it is. The two cross swords on a stairwell in a confrontation whose only
weapon is dialogue, but that became so charged I squirmed.
Hart talks a
great deal about Elizabeth before she appears onscreen. I was wondering, how
the heck is this movie going to sell a relationship between a twenty-something
beauty and this unattractive, verbose, drunk? The script, and Margaret
Qualley's performance, generate subtle magic. Elizabeth is shown to be a
good-hearted girl who recognizes and appreciates Hart's genius, and his worship
of her. She's also as savvy as a jewel thief and she knows how to take
advantage of Larry without letting him touch her in any significant way.
I'd watch the
entire movie all over again just to enjoy Patrick Kennedy's performance as EB
White. Screenwriter Kaplow "invited" White, a novelist and prose
stylist, into Sardi's bar on this night in order to give Hart another writer to
talk to. Kennedy's performance felt so real to me I was completely submerged in
willing suspension of disbelief and I felt as if they had somehow resurrected
the real EB White. White is alternately collegial with Hart, his respected
fellow wordsmith, indulgent of Hart, a man who clearly is on his last legs, and
inspired by Hart, who, in Kaplow's fictional flourish, prompts White to write
his novel Stuart Little.
Blue Moon is not for everybody. The action is all
in the dialogue. Hart was not, to this viewer, a sympathetic character. I'm
immune to extending my compassion to active addicts. Hart will, shortly after
the action of this film, get drunk, collapse in a cold rain, and die of
pneumonia. I loved this movie anyway. It brought a character to full life. It
educated me about a significant chapter in American artistic history. It
invited me to consider whether I am more appreciative of sardonic wit or
warm-hearted sentiment. I probably love both equally.
There's a
brief, but good, documentary about Rodgers and Hart here. There's a salute
to Oscar Hammerstein II's "humanism" here.
Danusha V.
Goska is the author of God
through Binoculars: A Hitchhiker at a Monastery.

Again, I'm posting non-Polish related stuff here because Google is hiding my other blog, devoted to non -Polish stuff, and afaik, Google has not hidden this blog yet.
ReplyDeleteI do not understand why Google is blocking you. You are not saying anything that is challenging anyone in power. So why do you think that you are getting blocked?
ReplyDeleteI have been wondering the same
DeleteI posted a civil but critical review of a memoir by former actress Ellen Page.
ReplyDelete