In Everything Everywhere All at Once, the duo take every existential question, raunchy joke and nonsensical notion they’ve seemingly ever had and throw it all at the screen in a chaotic, hectic and utterly exhausting two hours and 12 minutes, an all-consuming sensorial cinematic assault. Whether or not that sounds like a good time at the movies is up to the viewer to decide. The audaciously daring and original filmmaking on display is indeed laudable, as well as the obvious delight poured into the making of this film. Evelyn doesn’t have time or attention to dole out to anyone, and her family is struggling. He teaches her how to jump into other parallel lives she’s led, like ones where she studied martial arts, perhaps.
Source: The Star March 27, 2022 05:15 UTC