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The Lobster

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
2015 film by Yorgos Lanthimos
For other uses, seeLobster (disambiguation).

The Lobster
Theatrical release poster[1]
Directed byYorgos Lanthimos
Written by
Produced by
  • Ceci Dempsey
  • Ed Guiney
  • Yorgos Lanthimos
  • Lee Magiday
Starring
CinematographyThimios Bakatakis
Edited byYorgos Mavropsaridis
Production
companies
Distributed by
  • Feelgood Entertainment (Greece)
  • Haut et Court (France)
  • Element Pictures (Ireland)
  • De Filmfreak (Netherlands)
  • Picturehouse Entertainment (United Kingdom)
Release dates
  • 15 May 2015 (2015-05-15) (Cannes)
  • 16 October 2015 (2015-10-16) (Ireland and United Kingdom)
  • 22 October 2015 (2015-10-22) (Greece and Netherlands)
  • 28 October 2015 (2015-10-28) (France)
Running time
118 minutes[2]
Countries
  • Ireland
  • United Kingdom
  • Greece
  • France
  • Netherlands
Languages
  • English
  • French
Budget$4 million[3]
Box office$18 million[4]

The Lobster is a 2015absurdistblack comedydrama film directed and co-produced byYorgos Lanthimos, from a screenplay by Lanthimos andEfthimis Filippou.[5][6][7] It starsColin Farrell,Rachel Weisz,Jessica Barden,Olivia Colman,Ashley Jensen,Ariane Labed,Angeliki Papoulia,John C. Reilly,Léa Seydoux,Michael Smiley, andBen Whishaw. The film follows a newly single bachelor who moves into a hotel with other singles, who are all obliged to find a romantic partner in 45 days, lest they be transformed into animals.[8]

The film was announced in October 2013, withJason Clarke originally cast in the lead role. After Clarke left production, Farrell replaced him by February 2014, with Weisz also joining the cast afterElizabeth Olsen dropped out. The rest of the cast was rounded out by March asprincipal photography began, which concluded in May. Filming largely took place inDublin andCounty Kerry. The film is aco-production byIreland, theUnited Kingdom,Greece,France, and theNetherlands.

The Lobster premiered at the2015 Cannes Film Festival on 15 May, where it competed for thePalme d'Or and won theJury Prize. It was theatrically released in the United Kingdom on 16 October 2015, grossing $18 million on a $4 million budget.[9] The film received positive reviews from critics, with praise for its screenplay, humor, originality, and thematic content, and was nominated forBest Original Screenplay at the89th Academy Awards and forOutstanding British Film at the69th British Academy Film Awards.

Plot

[edit]

David is escorted to a hotel after his wife leaves him for another man. The hotel manager reveals that single people have 45 days to find a partner or they will be transformed into an animal of their choice (the dog accompanying David is his brother Bob). David is set on becoming alobster, should he fail. David makes the acquaintance of Robert, a man with alisp, and John, a man with a limp. Guests are fixated on finding a mate with whom they share superficial traits such as minor ailments, which they believe to be the key to compatibility.

The hotel has many rules and rituals:masturbation is banned, butsexual stimulation by the hotel maid is mandatory, and guests attend dances and watchpropaganda extolling the advantages of partnership. Residents can extend their deadline by hunting and tranquilizing the single people who live in the forest, with each captured "loner" earning them an additional day. On the way to a hunt, a woman with a fondness forbutter biscuits offers David sexual favours, which he declines. She tells him that if she fails to find a mate, she will kill herself by jumping from a hotel window.

John wins the affections of a woman with constant nosebleeds by purposely smashing his nose in secret. They move to the couples' section to begin a month-long trial partnership. David later decides to court a notoriously cruel woman who has tranquilized more loners than anyone else. Their initial conversation is accompanied by the screams of the biscuit-loving woman, who has injured herself by jumping from a first floor window. David pretends to enjoy the woman's suffering to gain the heartless woman's interest. He later joins her in a hot tub where she feigns choking on an olive to test him. Noticing that he makes no attempt to help her, she decides that they are a match, and the two are shifted to the couples' suite. David wakes up one morning and finds she has killed his dog-brother. As David tearfully mourns him, she concludes that their relationship is a lie and attempts to drag him to the hotel manager to have him punished, turned into the "animal that no one wants to be". He escapes and, with the help of a sympathetic maid (later revealed as amole working for the loners), tranquilizes his partner and transforms her into an unspecified animal.

David escapes the hotel and joins the loners in the woods. In contrast to the hotel, they forbid any kind of romance, which is punishable by mutilation. David, who isshort-sighted, begins a secret relationship with a woman who is also short-sighted. They develop a gestural language they use to communicate. They are taken on covert missions to the nearby city, where their cover requires them to appear as husband and wife, which they secretly enjoy.

The loners launch a raid to sabotage the hotel. David tells the woman with nosebleeds that John has been faking his. Other loners hold the hotel manager and her husband at gunpoint, tricking him into shooting his wife to save himself, but the gun is not loaded. They leave the couple to face each other.

The leader of the loners obtains the short-sighted woman's journal and discovers David's plan to escape with her. The leader and the maid take the woman to the city, ostensibly to have an operation to cure her short-sightedness, but instead have her blinded. The woman attempts to stab the leader, but the leader uses the maid as a human shield and pretends to die when the woman stabs the maid to death. David and the woman try to find something else that they have in common, to no avail. One morning, David overpowers the leader, leaving her tied up in an open grave to be eaten alive by wild dogs. He and the blind woman escape to the city and stop at a restaurant. David goes to the restroom and hesitantly prepares to blind himself with a steak knife.

Cast

[edit]

Production

[edit]

Principal photography began on 24 March 2014, and concluded on 9 May 2014.[11] Filming took place inDublin,Ireland, which represents "The City" in the film, and also at locations in and aroundCounty Kerry, includingSneem, Dromore Woods andKenmare.[12][13][14] The hotel used was the Parknasilla Resort and Spa hotel, near Sneem.[15]

Casting

[edit]

It was originally reported on 23 October 2013 thatJason Clarke would lead the cast, with support fromBen Whishaw,Léa Seydoux,Olivia Colman,Ariane Labed, andAngeliki Papoulia.[16] Clarke dropped out of the film due to scheduling conflicts withEverest, and on 3 February it was announced thatColin Farrell andRachel Weisz would star inThe Lobster.[17]Elizabeth Olsen was approached to star in the film, but turned down the offer due to her commitments withMarvel Studios forAvengers: Age of Ultron. She later wondered to what entirely different path the movie could have taken her acting career, but ultimately felt that she made the right decision.[18] Shortly after principal photography began,John C. Reilly andAshley Jensen joined the cast on 31 March 2014.[19]

Release

[edit]

In May 2014, it was announced thatSony Pictures Releasing acquired the distribution rights for Australia, New Zealand, Germany, Scandinavia, Russia, Eastern Europe, and Latin America.[20] Afilm still featuring Farrell, Whishaw, and Reilly was released around the same time.[21] The film's posters were designed by Vasilis Marmatakis, with the Colin Farrellone sheet version considered by professional poster designer Adrian Curry the second-best poster of the 2010s.[1]

In May 2015,Alchemy tentatively acquired United States distribution rights. Due to its lack of money at the time,A24 then got them instead.[22][23] Originally scheduled for an 11 March 2016 release, it was rescheduled to 13 May 2016.[24][25]

Reception

[edit]

Critical response

[edit]

OnRotten Tomatoes, the film has an approval rating of 88% based on reviews from 268 critics, with an average rating of 7.6/10. The website's critical consensus reads, "As strange as it is thrillingly ambitious,The Lobster is definitely an acquired taste — but for viewers with the fortitude to crack through Yorgos Lanthimos' offbeat sensibilities, it should prove a savory cinematic treat".[26] OnMetacritic, which assigns aweighted average score out of 100 to reviews from mainstream critics, the film received an average score of 82, based on 44 reviews, indicating "universal acclaim".[27]

Oliver Lyttelton ofThe Playlist awarded the film an "A" grade and described it as "an atypically rich and substantial comedy" with "an uproarious yet deadpan satire concerning societal constructs, dating mores and power structures that also manages to be a surprisingly moving, gloriously weird love story". He concluded that the film was Lanthimos' "most accessible and purely enjoyable film yet".[28] Chris Nashawaty ofEntertainment Weekly gave a positive review and commended the film for being "visually stunning, narratively bold, and totally singular", adding that "it opens [one's] eyes to a new way of storytelling".[29]

Guy Lodge, writing forVariety, called the film "a wickedly funny, unexpectedly moving satire of couple-fixated society", elaborating that Lanthimos' "confounding setup emerges as a brilliantallegory for the increasingly superficial systems of contemporary courtship, including the like-for-like algorithms of online dating sites and the hot-or-not snap judgments ofTinder".[30]

Peter Bradshaw ofThe Guardian rated the film three stars out of five, and wrote thatThe Lobster is "elegant and eccentric in Lanthimos' familiar style", but "appears to run out of ideas at its mid-way point".[31] Similarly, reviews in theCleveland Plain Dealer and theVancouver Sun judged the film unable to sustain itself across its full runtime.[32][33]IGN awarded it a score of 8.5 out of 10, saying "Colin Farrell heads up this surreal, hilarious and ultimately quite disturbing tale."[34]

Wai Chee Dimock, writing in theLos Angeles Review of Books, calledThe Lobster a "fable ofpurgatory" and compared the film to the work ofSamuel Beckett, saying that, for this all-Greek team, "absurdist theater is second nature, as it was second nature to the Irish Beckett a century ago".[35]

Timothy Laurie and Hannah Stark, writing in theNew Review of Film and Television Studies, praiseThe Lobster as "both a satire of compulsory coupling and an equally damning critique of libertarian individualism as an alternative to domestic monogamy".[36]

Accolades

[edit]
List of awards and nominations forThe Lobster
Award / film festivalCategoryRecipient(s)Result
Academy Awards[37][38]Best Original ScreenplayYorgos Lanthimos andEfthimis FilippouNominated
ACE Eddie Awards[39]Best Edited Feature Film – Comedy or MusicalYorgos MavropsaridisNominated
Austin Film Critics Association[40][41]Best FilmThe Lobster8th Place
Best ActorColin FarrellNominated
Best Original ScreenplayYorgos Lanthimos and Efthimis FilippouNominated
Belgian Film Critics Association[42]Grand PrixThe LobsterNominated
British Academy Film Awards[43]Outstanding British FilmThe LobsterNominated
British Independent Film Awards[44][45]Best British Independent FilmThe LobsterNominated
Best DirectorYorgos LanthimosNominated
Best ActorColin FarrellNominated
Best Supporting ActressOlivia ColmanWon
Best Supporting ActorBen WhishawNominated
Best ScreenplayYorgos Lanthimos and Efthimis FilippouNominated
Producer of the YearCeci Dempsey, Ed Guiney, Yorgos Lanthimos, and Lee MagidayNominated
Cannes Film Festival[46][47]Palme d'OrThe LobsterNominated
Jury PrizeThe LobsterWon
Queer Palm – Special MentionThe LobsterWon
Palm Dog Award – Grand Jury PrizeBob the dogWon
Crested Butte Film FestivalBest Narrative FeatureThe LobsterWon
Chicago Film Critics Association[48]Best ActorColin FarrellNominated
Best Original ScreenplayYorgos Lanthimos and Efthimis FilippouNominated
Critics' Choice Awards[49]Best Original ScreenplayYorgos Lanthimos and Efthimis FilippouNominated
Dorian Awards[50]Screenplay of the YearYorgos Lanthimos and Efthimis FilippouNominated
Dublin Film Critics' Circle[51]Best Irish FilmThe Lobster5th place
Best ActorColin Farrell5th place
European Film Awards[52][53]Best European FilmThe LobsterNominated
Best European DirectorYorgos LanthimosNominated
Best European ActorColin FarrellNominated
Best European ScreenwriterYorgos Lanthimos and Efthimis FilippouWon
Best Costume DesignerSarah BlenkinsopWon
People's Choice AwardThe LobsterNominated
Evening Standard British Film Awards[54][55]Best FilmThe LobsterNominated
Award for ComedyOlivia ColmanNominated
Colin FarrellNominated
Film Fest Gent[56]Georges Delerue Award for Best Sound DesignThe LobsterWon
Florida Film Critics Circle[57]Best FilmThe LobsterWon
Best DirectorYorgos LanthimosRunner-up
Best Original ScreenplayYorgos Lanthimos and Efthimis FilippouWon
Golden Globe Awards[58]Best Actor – Motion Picture Musical or ComedyColin FarrellNominated
Golden Tomato Awards[59]Best Sci-Fi/Fantasy Movie 2016The Lobster4th Place
IndieWire Critics Poll[60]Best ActorColin Farrell3rd Place
Best ScreenplayThe Lobster5th Place
Irish Film & Television Awards[61]Best Actor in a Lead Role (Film)Colin FarrellNominated
London Film Critics' Circle[62]British / Irish Film of the YearThe LobsterNominated
Supporting Actress of the YearOlivia ColmanNominated
British / Irish Actor of the YearColin FarrellNominated
Los Angeles Film Critics Association[63]Best ScreenplayYorgos Lanthimos and Efthimis FilippouWon
Miami International Film Festival[64]Grand Jury Award for Best DirectorYorgos LanthimosWon
Online Film Critics Society 2015[65]Best Non-U.S. FilmsThe LobsterWon
Online Film Critics Society 2016[66]Best Original ScreenplayYorgos Lanthimos and Efthimis FilippouNominated
Rotterdam International Film Festival[67]ARTE International Prize for Best CineMart 2013 ProjectThe LobsterWon
San Diego Film Critics Society[68][69]Best Original ScreenplayYorgos Lanthimos and Efthimis FilippouRunner-up
San Francisco Film Critics Circle[70][71]Best Original ScreenplayYorgos Lanthimos and Efthimis FilippouNominated
Satellite Awards[72]Best Original ScreenplayYorgos Lanthimos and Efthimis FilippouNominated
Washington D.C. Area Film Critics Association[73]Best Original ScreenplayYorgos Lanthimos and Efthimis FilippouNominated

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[edit]
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External links

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