“Inner beauty is what counts” is a cliche many films have tried and failed to tackle, but A Different Man manages to make it feel unsettlingly new. The film follows Edward, a disfigured man who lives a normal but lonely life. No one is overtly mean to Edward—in fact, many are nice—but he’s consumed by the thought of What If. What if he looked like everyone else? Would his neighbor Ingrid finally make a move on him? Would he be the actor he dreamed he’d be? Would he finally get fewer stares on the street? Those questions are answered when a medical trial transforms his face, but they’re rarely pleasant. A Different Man is a dark comedy with some hints of meta; Stan’s character provides the tragedy, Pearson delivers the wry humor, while Reinsve, as the playwright in charge of dramatizing Edward’s life, is the source of the film’s meta-commentary. It’s the weakest link of the three--it feels like a cop-out when it forgives itself for being “exploitative” but the rest of the film’s elements gel to make a modern parable of sorts about appearance and contentment.
Genre: Comedy, Drama, Horror, Thriller
Actor: Aaron Schimberg, Adam Pearson, Billy Griffith, Charlie Korsmo, Doug Barron, Eleanore Pienta, Juney Smith, Lawrence Arancio, Malachi Weir, Marc Geller, Michael Shannon, Miles G. Jackson, Neal Davidson, Owen Kline, Patrick Wang, Renate Reinsve, Sebastian Stan
Director: Aaron Schimberg
Rating: R