| Aftersun | |
|---|---|
Release poster | |
| Directed by | Charlotte Wells |
| Written by | Charlotte Wells |
| Produced by |
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| Starring | |
| Cinematography | Gregory Oke |
| Edited by | Blair McClendon |
| Music by | Oliver Coates |
Production companies | |
| Distributed by | |
Release dates |
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Running time | 101 minutes |
| Countries |
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| Language | English |
| Box office | $9.7 million[1][2] |
Aftersun is a 2022semi-autobiographicalcoming-of-agedrama film written and directed byCharlotte Wells in herfeature directorial debut. StarringPaul Mescal,Frankie Corio, andCelia Rowlson-Hall, the film is loosely based on Wells' childhood and follows an 11-year-oldScottish girl on holiday with her father at a Turkish resort on the eve of his 31st birthday.
Aftersun had its world premiere at theCannes Film Festival on 21 May 2022, where Wells was nominated for theCaméra d'Or. It was theatrically released in the United States on 21 October and in the United Kingdom on 18 November. The film received widespread acclaim from critics, who praised the direction, screenplay, cinematography, visuals, and performances of Corio and Mescal.
Aftersun received four nominations at the76th BAFTA Awards, where Wells won forOutstanding Debut by a British Writer, Director or Producer.[3] Mescal was nominated asBest Lead Actor at the95th Academy Awards, in addition to receivingBAFTA nomination in the same category. TheNational Board of Review namedAftersun one of the best films of 2022[4] andSight and Sound ranked it first on its list of the best films of 2022.[5] Since then, it has been cited as among thebest films of the 2020s and the 21st century.[6][7][8]
In 1999, Scottish 11-year-old Sophie Patterson travels to a Turkish holiday resort with her 30-year-old father, Calum, who moved to London after separating amicably from her mother. Sophie records the holiday on aMiniDV camera, the footage of which is interspersed throughout the film. Over the course of the holiday, Sophie befriends and observes various teenage English tourists at the resort, often meeting and playing arcade games with a boy named Michael. Calum exhibits signs of depression, anxiety, and internal turmoil, which he tries to hide from Sophie beneath a facade of contentment. During his time alone, he practicestai chi and reads self-help books; he also smokes, which he hides from Sophie.
One day, Sophie and Calum go scuba diving and she loses her expensive scuba mask; Calum feigns nonchalance, but Sophie senses his actual feelings, says she knows the mask was expensive, and comforts him. Calum later tells their diving instructor that he is surprised he has lived to be 30. Soon after, Calum and Sophie go to a rug shop, where she sees him grapple with the cost of one he likes. He declines to buy the rug, but later returns alone and buys it.
The next night, Sophie and Calum attend a karaoke night and Sophie signs them up for a song. Calum refuses to sing with Sophie despite her insistence, and she sings "Losing My Religion" alone as Calum watches. Upset by being left alone by him, Sophie refuses to return to their room with him and hangs out with some other tourists she previously met playing billiards. Michael creeps up on Sophie from behind, frightening her. They later kiss beside a pool. Meanwhile, Calum goes to the beach and walks into the ocean. When Sophie returns to their room, she finds him asleep naked and gently covers him with a sheet.
The two reconcile the next day while travelling to themud baths, and Calum apologises for his behaviour the previous night. Sophie surprises him by having other tourists sing "For He's a Jolly Good Fellow" for his 31st birthday. Calum watches stoically. He is shown sobbing in the hotel room alone; on the floor is a postcard addressed to Sophie that tells her to never forget that he loves her. On the last night of their holiday, Calum and Sophie dance to "Under Pressure" in a loving embrace. In the morning, at the airport, Calum waves goodbye and sends Sophie off on her flight home. In the present day, the adult Sophie lives in New York with her wife and young child. The rug that Calum bought, now worn with use, lies on their bedroom floor. Sophie watches the video footage from the holiday in Turkey.
Interspersed throughout the film are abstract, dreamlike sequences in which the adult Sophie stands in the middle of a crowded rave, catching glimpses of Calum dancing frantically through strobing lights. Throughout the sequences, Sophie attempts to get closer to him, eventually briefly embracing him; with their hands wrapped around each other, Calum ultimately falls from Sophie's grasp. In the final scene, Calum packs thecamcorder away and walks down the airport hallway after having waved goodbye to Sophie, opening the doors to the rave.
Aftersun is director and writer Charlotte Wells' feature film debut. Calling it "emotionally autobiographical", she sought to delve into "a different period" in a relationship between a young parent and a daughter than what she explored in her 2015 debut short filmTuesday.[9] Frankie Corio was one of over 800 applicants before being cast.[9] Filming took place inÖlüdeniz, Turkey.[10] During the two-week rehearsal period Corio and Mescal spent time at a holiday resort in order to make their dynamic more authentic.[11]
In 2025, Charlotte Wells spoke about the production ofAftersun and her collaboration with Mescal, calling their partnership "the start of a potential De Niro–Scorsese relationship". She discussed the film's continued resonance while serving on the Bright Horizons jury at theMelbourne International Film Festival and theVenice Film Festival, where she chaired theLuigi De Laurentiis Award jury.[12][13]
Oliver Coates wrote and composed the film'soriginal score.
The film premiered as part ofCritics' Week during the2022 Cannes Film Festival,[15] where it won a jury prize.[16] It screened at theEdinburgh International Film Festival,[17] theMelbourne International Film Festival,[18] theTelluride Film Festival,[19] theToronto International Film Festival,[20] theBFI London Film Festival,[21] theNew York Film Festival,[22] theNew Hampshire Film Festival,[23] theAdelaide Film Festival,[24] and the Athens International Film Festival.[25]
Aftersun was distributed in Austria, France, Germany, India, Ireland, Italy, Latin America, Spain, Turkey and the United Kingdom byMubi and in the United States and Canada byA24.[26][27] It was released in the United States on 21 October 2022 and in the United Kingdom on 18 November.[28][29] The film was released for video on demand in the United States on 20 December[30] and was made available to stream on Mubi on 5 January 2023 in countries where Mubi distributes the film.
OnRotten Tomatoes,Aftersun holds an approval rating of 96% based on 245 reviews, with an average rating of 8.8/10. The website's critics consensus reads, "Led by Frankie Corio's tremendous performance,Aftersun deftly ushers audiences to the intersection between our memories of loved ones and who they really are."[31]Metacritic assigned the film a weighted average score of 95 out of 100 based on 46 critics, indicating "universal acclaim".[32]
The New York Times criticA.O. Scott called the film "astonishing and devastating", writing that Wells was "very nearly reinventing the language of film, unlocking the medium's often dormant potential to disclose inner worlds of consciousness and feeling."[33]Screen Daily's Fionnuala Halligan wrote that Wells' "measured but relentless probing ... mark her out as one of the most promising new voices in British cinema in recent years".[34] Guy Lodge ofVariety called the film "sensuous, sharply moving".[35] Carlos Aguilar ofTheWrap praised Gregory Oke's "visually fluid" cinematography, saying it "evokes a radiant melancholia".[36] InEmpire, Beth Webb called the film a "deftly orchestrated, empathetic and honest character study" and "A triumph of new British filmmaking."[37] In 2023, filmmakerClaire Denis said: "Never before have I felt the power of a point of view that immerses us into gazes that dare to secretly spar in front of the lens of a small videocamera. We are pulled in by the characters' words too, which comprise a kind of game that slowly reveals the father to his almost adolescent daughter."[38] In 2024, filmmakerChristopher Nolan saidAftersun was one of his favorite films, calling it "just a beautiful film".[39] In 2025, actorsVicky Krieps,Dolly de Leon andStephen Merchant, composerCarter Burwell, and filmmakersSofia Coppola andJoachim Trier listedAftersun among their favorite films of the 21st century.[40]
Several critics have pointed out the film's resonances with the work ofMargaret Tait; asMark Kermode ofThe Guardian writes, "There are also clear traces of the films of Margaret Tait in Wells's craft, specificallyBlue Black Permanent (1992), which seems to have served as a tonal reference (a volume of Tait's writings is prominently displayed on screen)."[41] In an interview, Wells acknowledged Tait's impact on her, particularlyBlue Black Permanent, saying, "It's a special film and it relates in many ways to what I was doing".[42] A copy of Tait'sPoems, Stories and Writings lies between a tai chi manual and a self-help book in Calum's pile of holiday readings. Pat Brown ofSlant Magazine called the film's "Under Pressure" sequence one of the best movie scenes of 2022, saying that it "brings to the surface what was kept simmering throughout: the searing pain of loss that's led Sophie to reflect on the past."[43]
In 2024,Collider ranked the film sixth on its list of the "30 Best Movies of the 2020s (So Far)," with Jeremy Urquhart calling it "a film about growing up and reinterpreting who your parents are or were, as people, once you're old enough to see the world how they might've seen it when you were just a kid. Any descriptions of whatAftersun is about—or what emotions it inspires—ultimately undersell it. One really has to watch it and engage with it to feel and understand exactly what it's going for."Business Insider included it on its list of the "25 Best British Movies of the Last Ten Years".[44]IndieWire ranked a line spoken by Sophie ("I think it’s nice that we share the same sky") 10th on its list of the "22 Best Movie Quotes of 2022".[45] The site also ranked the film third on its list of "The 100 Best Movies of the 2020s (So Far)" in June 2025.[46] In 2025,Aftersun ranked 78th onThe New York Times's list of the "100 Best Movies of the 21st Century" and 35th on the "Readers' Choice" edition of the list.[47][48]
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