A Different Man Review

Updated:

Jan 27, 2024 9:32 pm

Posted:

Jan 27, 2024 6:03 pm

This review is based on a screening at the 2024 Sundance Film Festival. A Different Man will be released by A24 sometime this year.

A Different Man doesnā€™t fit neatly into one genre. You could call it a psychological thriller, or maybe a drama/satire, but what I prefer to call it is a twisted little joke of a film ā€“ and I do mean that as a compliment. Both Charlie Kaufman and Franz Kafka-esque, writer/director Aaron Schimberg eventually leads us into a biting, darkly funny, and unforgiving examination of our obsession with physical beauty, the line between representation and exploitation, and the madness that envy can lead to, all anchored by powerhouse performances by Sebastian Stan and Adam Pearson.

The biggest issue with A Different Man, however, is how long it takes for it to get to that examination. Itā€™s a slow start as weā€™re introduced to Stanā€™s character Edward, an aspiring actor with facial deformities who lives a lonely life in a sad apartment, a long-ignored hole in the ceiling an unsubtle metaphor for Edwardā€™s own lack of TLC. Even when itā€™s a bit of a slog, though, Stan is fascinating. Heā€™s unrecognizable not just for the detailed prosthetics that obscure his face, but his entire demeanor as Edward slumps about life, constantly hunched over as he carries the weight of his condition on his shoulders.

Stan isnā€™t in prosthetics the entire film, however, as an experimental trial turns successful and rids him of the bulging tumors on his face. The practical effects are both phenomenal and gruesome as Edward quite literally sheds his skin, finally granting him the handsome appearance of, well, Sebastian Stan. But itā€™s when Edward embarks on a new life entirely that A Different Man gets to the meat of what itā€™s trying to say, ushered in by the first appearance of Adam Pearsonā€™s Oswald.

Even when itā€™s a bit of a slog, Sebastian Stan is fascinating.

Oswald has neurofibromatosis and the same kind of facial disfigurement that Edward used to have ā€“ but he also has the charm, confidence, and an endless string of talents that Edward could only dream of, which sparks an envious obsession laced with cruel irony. Pearson, best known previously for his role in 2013ā€™s Under the Skin, is absolutely perfect as Oswald, getting some of the biggest laughs in the film as he floats through the world seemingly wholly unbothered by his condition, Edwardā€™s occasional rudeness, or anything at all really.

Oswald, too, is endlessly likable, wrapping everyone in his orbit around his finger ā€“ but thereā€™s something a little deeper in Pearson’s performance too. Heā€™s so perfect, so apparently oblivious to the way Edward seethes at him that thereā€™s almost a bit of smarminess to him, even if weā€™re only seeing it through Edwardā€™s perspective. Stan and Pearson play off one another wonderfully as their one-sided rivalry grows darker and darker, catalyzed by a play based on Edwardā€™s old life written by one of its few bright spots, a woman named Ingrid (Renate Reinsve).

Reinsve, too, gets a few of the most bleakly funny lines as her character introduces some of the movieā€™s most complicated moral complications surrounding art, fetishism, and exploitation. Schimbergā€™s endlessly unpredictable script leads to an at times unbelievable but utterly engrossing final act, one that doesnā€™t necessarily answer the many questions it raises ā€“ and thatā€™s part of its charm.

A Different Man has no interest in wrapping a neat bow on anything or telling us how to feel about the bizarre events that eventually play out. Thanks to a smart script and Stanā€™s brooding performance, youā€™ll have no idea whether to pity or fear Edward by the end, whether he ever had a chance of becoming ā€œa different manā€ or not ā€“ and thatā€™s entirely the point.

VerdictIt may take a bit too long to get there, but A Different Man eventually becomes an unflinching, unforgiving examination of the masks we wear and whether we can truly change our natures. Aaron Schimbergā€™s twisty script is sold by standout performances from Sebastian Stan and Adam Pearson, who are fascinating in a one-sided rivalry. Occasionally tragic, often shocking and darkly funny, A Different Man raises countless questions and doesnā€™t apologize for the ones it leaves unanswered.

In This ArticleA Different Man Reviewgreat

A Different Man is a twisted, sometimes grueling, frequently darkly funny ride with standout performances from Sebastian Stan and Adam Pearson.

Alex Stedman

Reviews

81 %

User Score

9 ratings
Rate This

Leave your comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *