Skip to main content

FLIGHT OF FANCY (EVERYTHING, EVERYWHERE, ALL AT ONCE)

© A24

So imagine if Spike Jonze, Michel Gondry or Charlie Kaufman were told: "Go make a martial arts movie".

That's the kind of insanity Daniels Kwan and Scheinert are reaching for in 'Everything, Everywhere, All At Once'.

The $14.3 million movie has become an instant cult classic, earning over $100 million worldwide with its madcap mix of the multiverse, martial arts and mirth.

The film has also become an end of year favourite among many critics circles and a real awards season contender, hoovering up six Golden Globe nominations including Best Picture - Musical or a Comedy.

© A24

Michelle Yeoh plays Evelyn Wang, a jaded laundromat owner married to Ke Huy Quan's Waymond.

The couple are Chinese emigrants to the US whose family life has gone stale. 

They have a daughter, Stephanie Hsu's Joy who is keen for her mother to approve of her non Asian girlfriend, Tallie Mendel's Becky.

The family also live with Evelyn's demanding father, James Hong's Gong Gong who she is afraid to tell that her daughter is gay.

© A24

Evelyn is feeling the pressure of their business being audited by the Inland Revenue Service and, to make matters worse, Waymond is planning to divorce her.

Summoned to appear before Jamie Lee Curtis' diligent, dowdy and misanthropic auditor Deirdre Beaubeirdre, Evelyn is taken aback when her husband suddenly reveals in the IRS office's elevator that not everything is what it seems.

Momentarily possessed by the spirit of "Alpha Waymond," he discloses there are many parallel universes that they live in with new ones created all the time.

Those multiverses are determined by Evelyn's life choices.

None of this, however, makes sense to Evelyn.

© A24

He nevertheless reveals that there is an Alphaverse version of Evelyn that developed technology which enables people to access the best version of themselves by leaping into different multiverse worlds.

However the multiverse is under threat from Jobu Topaki, a version of Joy, who has developed her own multiverse jumping technology.

Describing it as an "everything bagel," the technology Jobu/Joy is deploying is capable of destroying reality.

With Waymond urging her to save the multiverse, Evelyn finds herself sucked into a surreal conflict with Jobu, whose minions are deployed in the IRS office.

© A24

As she accesses each multiverse strand, Evelyn discovers a range of wildly different alternative lives.

In one she is a glamorous movie star.

In another, she is a Kung Fu master - accessing those skills in the fight to stop Jobu.

But with Gong Gong's Alpha version also commanding his own army and urging her to kill Joy in her own universe in order to stop Jobu, how can Evelyn use her powers to successfully negotiate a complex and sometimes bizarre network of multiverse worlds?

© A24

Working from their own script which was developed as far back as 2010,  Kwan and Scheinert conjure up one of the most hyperactive and daring movies of recent times.

'Everything, Everywhere, All At Once' fuses the Martial Arts of 'Clan of the White Lotus' with a 'Matrix'-style quest featuring a Special One tasked with disrupting the plans of a powerful supervillain.

Add into the mix the surreal quality of 'Being John Malkovich' and 'Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind,' laced with the violence of 'Fight Club' and you've got something approximating this film which doesn't always make sense but is breathtakingly ambitious and tremendous fun.

The Daniels, as Kwan and Scheinert are affectionately known, extract plenty of humour out of their absurdist action comedy concept.

© A24

Amid all the surreal gags lies some sharp parody.

Cineastes will love the film's joke at the expense of Brad Bird's Disney classic 'Ratatouille' which is constantly incorrectly referred to throughout the film.

There's a nod too to Wong Kar Kwai's romantic epic 'In the Mood for Love' in one of the parallel universe storylines.

Another gag specifically recalls Buster Keaton's groundbreaking silent movie comedy 'Sherlock Jr' as Evelyn shifts from location to location acquiring skills in various multiverse worlds.

© A24

Quentin Tarantino fans will recognise similarities to Gordon Liu's Pai Mei in the 'Kill Bill' films and Li Jing's Kung Fu Master which in itself is a nod to 1970s and 1980s Martial Arts classics like 'Clan of the White Lotus'.

Waymond's gadgets conjure up memories of one of Ke Huy Quan's best loved roles as the gadget wielding Richard "Data" Wang in 'The Goonies".

The Daniels go full meta too with their lead actress Michelle Yeoh, riffing on two signature roles from her career - her breakthrough performance internationally in 'Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon,' and specifically 'Crazy Rich Asians'.

The characters' adventures in the multiverse also recall the absurd, free spirited humour of Douglas Adams' 'Hitchhiker's Guide To The Galaxy' - there's even a bizarre world where Yeoh and Curtis have huge hot dog fingers on their hands.

© A24

'Everything, Everywhere, All At Once,' however, is more than just a succession of in-jokes.

Amid all the frenetic action sequences and surreal gags, it skillfully weaves in themes of inter-generational tensions, familial misunderstandings, emotional suppression and culture clashes in a way that bigger, brasher Hollywood superhero or action movies would never try.

All of this is done with superb brio.

It is also frankly a joy watching Yeoh, Quan and Curtis just cutting loose and having fun with tongue in cheek comic action roles.

© A24

Stephanie Hsu impresses too as Joy/Jobu.

And if that wasn't enough, there's a wonderfully quirky soundtrack featuring David Byrne, Randy Newman and Andre 3000.

Every once in a while a small film comes along and punches above its weight through sheer ingenuity.

'Everything, Everywhere, All At Once' is that kind of movie.

© A24

It's an exhausting watch but it is so eccentric that you will find yourself wishing to revisit it again and again.

Having caught Hollywood by surprise with its box office success, can it go all the way to Oscar glory? 

Perhaps but its awards season momentum will be determined by how the Daniels, Yeoh, Quan and Curtis fare at the Golden Globes.

Regardless of that, 'Everything, Everywhere, All At Once' has already exceeded expectations and it will undoubtedly be a cult movie for many years to come.

('Everything, Everywhere, All At Once' was released in UK and Irish cinemas on May 13, 2022)

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

A FAMILY DIVIDED (KIN, SEASON TWO)

© RTE & AMC+ Recently  in a review of 'The Dry' for the Slugger O'Toole website,  I wrote about it being a golden age for Irish TV drama. And it is. Last year saw Sharon Horgan's Irish Film and Television Award winning black comedy ' Bad Sisters ' delight audiences on Apple TV+. Fran Harris ' The Dry ' has made a bit of a splash on Britbox, RTE and ITVx. ©  RTE & AMC+ North of the border, Channel 4's ' Derry Girls ' and BBC Northern Ireland's 'Three Families' and ' Blue Lights ' have really impressed audiences. However over the past eight weeks, one show has muscled its way back to the front of the pack. 'Kin' is a gangland drama made by RTE and AMC. The first series hit our screens in September 2021 and made an immediate impression with its high production values and gripping storyline. © RTE & AMC+ The tale of a south Dublin crime family, the Kinsellas sucked into a feud with a more powerful gang hea

FATHER TIME (FRASIER - REBOOT, SEASON ONE)

© Paramount+ & CBS Studios It's been one of the most eagerly anticipated shows of 2023. It's also been one of the year's most feared shows. 'Frasier' - The Reboot was always going to have huge expectations to live up to. For 11 seasons, the original show was a massive ratings draw on NBC in the US and on other TV stations around the world. © Paramount+ & CBS Studios Adored by critics as much as it was by audiences, the 'Cheers' spin-off built up a huge fanbase with a combination of smart writing and brilliant comedy acting. It netted an impressive haul of 37 Primetime Emmy awards. Even after the final episode aired in May 2004, the Seattle-based sitcom has remained a constant presence on our TV screens, with Channel 4 in the UK airing it every morning. So when it was announced in 2021 that Kelsey Grammer was reviving the sitcom, there was considerable joy in some quarters and trepidation in others. © Paramount+ & CBS Studios Many wondered how wou

TWO SOULS COLLIDE (BALLYWALTER)

© Breakout Pictures & Elysian 'Ballywalter' isn't about Ballywalter. The Northern Irish coastal village simply provides a backdrop for director Prasanna Puranawajah and screenwriter Stacey Gregg's delicate tale of damaged souls coming into each other's orbit and helping each other cope. If anything, Belfast features more than Ballywalter in Puranawajah's movie but we know  that title was already taken . Seana Kerslake plays Eileen, a twentysomething university dropout who has gone off the rails and is back living with her mum, Abigail McGibbon's Jen. Taking on the job of a taxi driver, she has to endure the opinions of customers who don't think it's a job for a woman. © Breakout Pictures & Elysian Eileen doubles as a barista and can be pretty spiky with the customers in both jobs. Disillusioned and dejected, she hides behind drink as she struggles to come to terms with the death of her father, the sudden ending of a relationship with a cheati