Dos jovenes conspiranoicos secuestran a la CEO de una empresa multimillonaria, convencidos de que es una extraterrestre malvada que planea acabar con la raza humana.Dos jovenes conspiranoicos secuestran a la CEO de una empresa multimillonaria, convencidos de que es una extraterrestre malvada que planea acabar con la raza humana.Dos jovenes conspiranoicos secuestran a la CEO de una empresa multimillonaria, convencidos de que es una extraterrestre malvada que planea acabar con la raza humana.
- Director/a
- Guionistas
- Estrellas
- Premios
- 6 premios y 82 nominaciones en total
Momma Cherri
- Tina
- (as Charita 'Momma Cherri' Jones)
Janlyn Bales
- Andromedan
- (as Janlyn Mallis Bales)
- Director/a
- Guionistas
- Todo el reparto y equipo
- Producción, taquilla y más en IMDbPro
Resumen
Reviewers say 'Bugonia' delves into conspiracy theories, corporate greed, and paranoia, featuring strong performances by Emma Stone and Jesse Plemons. The film is lauded for its dark humor, psychological tension, and distinctive visual style. However, some find the plot complex, the pacing sluggish, and the ending controversial. Its satirical approach to modern issues garners mixed reactions, with some praising its audacity and others deeming it pretentious or unengaging. While the acting is widely acclaimed, the script and direction remain contentious points.
Reseñas destacadas
Yorgos Lanthimos is back doing his usual weird thing with Bugonia. It's a remake of Save the Green Planet!, but feels colder and more deliberately uncomfortable.
Emma Stone is chilling as a boss-lady, and Jesse Plemons is incredible as the paranoid conspiracy-theorist unshaken in his conviction that she's an alien. The film is basically just them facing off, a true acting masterclass. It keeps you guessing till the very end.
Do not go in expecting a run-of-the-mill sci-fi action thriller. There are no laser battles or such business here. This is a claustrophobic psychological duel and pitch-black satire. If you want high-octane explosions, look elsewhere. If you don't mind feeling a bit sick and confused by the end, it's for you.
Emma Stone is chilling as a boss-lady, and Jesse Plemons is incredible as the paranoid conspiracy-theorist unshaken in his conviction that she's an alien. The film is basically just them facing off, a true acting masterclass. It keeps you guessing till the very end.
Do not go in expecting a run-of-the-mill sci-fi action thriller. There are no laser battles or such business here. This is a claustrophobic psychological duel and pitch-black satire. If you want high-octane explosions, look elsewhere. If you don't mind feeling a bit sick and confused by the end, it's for you.
London Film Festival review
For a moment BUGONIA is like watching "Misery" or "Funny Games" through the lens of 1950s Hollywood dystopian paranoia films. Yorgos follows the sadistic path he started in The Killing of a Sacred Deer and Kinds Of Kindness playing with Kubrick-like visuals and sounds to deliver a fairly straightforward cynical fable until it's not.
Emma and Jesse explore a violent theatricality and beautiful expressionism to great success. Both are harrowing and spectacular (this is Plemons best part ever) but are also limited by the linearity of it all. The last act reconnects Lanthimos with his subversive, unpredictable and absurd poetry but I guess Media, Politics and Truths are this year's true topics. Not surprising this film shares common grounds with Eddington.
I wanted to love it but I just really really liked it.
For a moment BUGONIA is like watching "Misery" or "Funny Games" through the lens of 1950s Hollywood dystopian paranoia films. Yorgos follows the sadistic path he started in The Killing of a Sacred Deer and Kinds Of Kindness playing with Kubrick-like visuals and sounds to deliver a fairly straightforward cynical fable until it's not.
Emma and Jesse explore a violent theatricality and beautiful expressionism to great success. Both are harrowing and spectacular (this is Plemons best part ever) but are also limited by the linearity of it all. The last act reconnects Lanthimos with his subversive, unpredictable and absurd poetry but I guess Media, Politics and Truths are this year's true topics. Not surprising this film shares common grounds with Eddington.
I wanted to love it but I just really really liked it.
Don't get me wrong, Emma Stone is terrific here, carrying that same cool, unreadable spark that Tilda Swinton built a career on, only with a younger, brighter edge. Stone has already collected two Oscars, though, and what really catches you off guard is Jesse Plemons, who turns in a performance so sharp and so unsettling that you keep thinking you've never quite seen him push himself like this.
"Bugonia" eases in with what looks like a simple setup, just two men talking, one dominating the dialogue while the other tries to keep pace, and before you realize it the whole thing has shifted into a story that moves fast yet stays grounded enough to feel like something that could unfold a few blocks from where you live. I was hooked from the first scene and stayed that way nearly all the way through, though the ending lingers longer than it needs to, just enough to place it a step below "Poor Things." Even so, it is unmistakably a Yorgos Lanthimos production, and it carries that same strange, irresistible flavor that makes his work so easy to sink into.
"Bugonia" eases in with what looks like a simple setup, just two men talking, one dominating the dialogue while the other tries to keep pace, and before you realize it the whole thing has shifted into a story that moves fast yet stays grounded enough to feel like something that could unfold a few blocks from where you live. I was hooked from the first scene and stayed that way nearly all the way through, though the ending lingers longer than it needs to, just enough to place it a step below "Poor Things." Even so, it is unmistakably a Yorgos Lanthimos production, and it carries that same strange, irresistible flavor that makes his work so easy to sink into.
Watching *Bugonia* felt strange in the best possible way. Lanthimos throws you into a world where nothing feels entirely normal - the rules are odd, people react in unpredictable ways, and yet something about all this chaos feels oddly familiar. You laugh, but there's always tension underneath it, like you're waiting for something to go wrong. The emotions hit harder than expected, even in moments that seem absurd on paper.
The story follows two conspiracy-obsessed men who kidnap Michele (played by Emma Stone), a corporate figure they believe is an alien trying to destroy Earth. It sounds ridiculous - and it is - but Lanthimos uses that absurdity to dig into paranoia, power, and the strange ways people cling to belief when faced with uncertainty.
Visually, the film looks beautiful and a bit unsettling. Shooting on 35mm gives it texture - the kind of imperfections, shadows, and lighting you don't get with digital. It makes the world feel alive, slightly out of sync, and that's exactly what this story needs. The camera work feels intentional without being flashy, every frame adding to the unease.
The tone is darkly funny but emotionally sharp. Lanthimos doesn't offer easy answers or explanations. He just builds tension through behavior - through silence, through glances, through moments that should be funny but end up being uncomfortable. Emma Stone stands out; she plays Michele with a mix of calm control and quiet menace that holds the film together.
It's one of those films that doesn't fully explain itself, and maybe that's the point. You either go along with its strange rhythm or you don't. For me, it worked - not because everything made sense, but because it felt honest in its chaos. Lanthimos doesn't tell you what to think, he just lets the madness unfold, and somehow, that's what makes it stick.
**Verdict:** 9/10 - not as tight as *The Favourite*, but easily Lanthimos's boldest and most unpredictable work since *The Lobster*.
.
The story follows two conspiracy-obsessed men who kidnap Michele (played by Emma Stone), a corporate figure they believe is an alien trying to destroy Earth. It sounds ridiculous - and it is - but Lanthimos uses that absurdity to dig into paranoia, power, and the strange ways people cling to belief when faced with uncertainty.
Visually, the film looks beautiful and a bit unsettling. Shooting on 35mm gives it texture - the kind of imperfections, shadows, and lighting you don't get with digital. It makes the world feel alive, slightly out of sync, and that's exactly what this story needs. The camera work feels intentional without being flashy, every frame adding to the unease.
The tone is darkly funny but emotionally sharp. Lanthimos doesn't offer easy answers or explanations. He just builds tension through behavior - through silence, through glances, through moments that should be funny but end up being uncomfortable. Emma Stone stands out; she plays Michele with a mix of calm control and quiet menace that holds the film together.
It's one of those films that doesn't fully explain itself, and maybe that's the point. You either go along with its strange rhythm or you don't. For me, it worked - not because everything made sense, but because it felt honest in its chaos. Lanthimos doesn't tell you what to think, he just lets the madness unfold, and somehow, that's what makes it stick.
**Verdict:** 9/10 - not as tight as *The Favourite*, but easily Lanthimos's boldest and most unpredictable work since *The Lobster*.
.
Plemons sinks into this role like wet cement.
If Heath Ledger's Joker was chaos on fire, Plemons is the silence that burns before the explosion. The yin to that yang. No makeup, no theatrics, just a man quietly losing his grip one inch at a time. You can't look away.
His scenes of him 'brainwashing' his cousin exudes a natural darkness I cannot recall ever seeing on screen before.
If Heath Ledger's Joker was chaos on fire, Plemons is the silence that burns before the explosion. The yin to that yang. No makeup, no theatrics, just a man quietly losing his grip one inch at a time. You can't look away.
His scenes of him 'brainwashing' his cousin exudes a natural darkness I cannot recall ever seeing on screen before.
The Movies of Yorgos Lanthimos
¿Sabías que...?
- CuriosidadesAidan Delbis, who had never acted professionally before, was cast as Don after Yorgos Lanthimos decided to find a non-professional neurodivergent actor to provide a different dynamic alongside Emma Stone and Jesse Plemons.
- PifiasWhen Teddy mispronounces "shibboleth," Michelle mocks him for using poor grammar. But grammar is the set of rules for how a language is structured (e.g. order of words in a sentence, inflection of words etc.), a mispronunciation is not a grammatical error.
- Créditos adicionalesThe Focus Features, Element Pictures and CJ ENM production companies are mentioned at the start of the film in cursive font without their production logos.
- Banda sonoraGood Luck, Babe
Performed by Chappell Roan
Written by Dan Nigro (as Daniel Leonard Nigro), Chappell Roan (as Kayleigh Rose Amstutz) and Justin Tranter
Courtesy of Island Records
Under license from Universal Music Operations Limited
Published by Sony Music Publishing and Old Mine Cut Publishing pub designee (BMI)
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Detalles
- Fecha de lanzamiento
- Países de origen
- Sitio oficial
- Idioma
- Títulos en diferentes países
- Bugonia Bugonia
- Localizaciones del rodaje
- Sarakiniko Beach, Milos Island, Grecia(beach in the end)
- Empresas productoras
- Ver más compañías en los créditos en IMDbPro
Taquilla
- Recaudación en Estados Unidos y Canadá
- 17.692.390 US$
- Fin de semana de estreno en EE. UU. y Canadá
- 709.848 US$
- 26 oct 2025
- Recaudación en todo el mundo
- 39.978.285 US$
- Duración
- 1h 58min(118 min)
- Color
- Mezcla de sonido
- Relación de aspecto
- 1.50 : 1
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