Acclaimed filmmaker Yorgos Lanthimos is back with Bugonia, a bizarre yet captivating blend of dark comedy and psychological thriller that’s already generating buzz across global film festivals. Critics are calling it “a darkly comic gut punch” — the kind of film that unsettles you long after you’ve left the theater.
Starring Emma Stone and Jesse Plemons, Bugonia dives into the chaos of paranoia, belief, and human cruelty — all wrapped in Lanthimos’s trademark absurdist tone. The story follows Teddy (Plemons), a beekeeper obsessed with conspiracy theories, who kidnaps a powerful corporate CEO, Michelle (Stone), convinced she’s an alien planning to destroy Earth. What unfolds next is part hostage thriller, part philosophical debate, and part twisted social satire.
Critics React
Film critics have hailed Bugonia as another bold step for Lanthimos, whose earlier works like The Favourite and Poor Things also explored dark humor and human contradiction.
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TIME Magazine described the film as “a strange and uneasy experience that mirrors the madness of modern times.”
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RogerEbert.com praised its performances, noting, “Emma Stone’s calm menace and Jesse Plemons’s wounded paranoia turn the film into an emotional chess match.”
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Some reviewers, however, found the pacing uneven, calling the midsection “sluggish” and overly confined.
Despite minor flaws, the general consensus is that Bugonia stands out for its audacity and emotional complexity. Lanthimos once again walks the fine line between laughter and discomfort — a space where his filmmaking truly thrives.
A Reunion of Powerhouses
This marks Emma Stone’s third collaboration with Lanthimos after The Favourite and Poor Things, and her performance is earning strong early Oscar buzz. Critics have called her portrayal “both hypnotic and horrifying.” Jesse Plemons, meanwhile, delivers a hauntingly sincere performance that grounds the movie’s surrealism in painful realism.
Bigger Picture
Beyond its twisted humor, Bugonia also tackles themes of environmental decay, blind faith, and moral decay — with bees as an eerie symbol of nature’s warning. The film forces viewers to question who the real monsters are: the powerful, the delusional, or the complacent.
Final Word
Bugonia may not be an easy watch, but that’s precisely why it’s being celebrated. It’s provocative, uncomfortable, and darkly hilarious — a film that doesn’t want to entertain you as much as it wants to wake you up.
With glowing early reviews and Lanthimos’s growing reputation as one of cinema’s boldest storytellers, Bugonia seems poised to dominate the upcoming awards season — and haunt audiences long after the credits roll.
