Civil War (film)

Civil War is a 2024 dystopian action thriller film[6] written and directed by Alex Garland, starring Kirsten Dunst, Wagner Moura, Cailee Spaeny, Stephen McKinley Henderson, Sonoya Mizuno, and Nick Offerman.After surviving a suicide bombing in New York City, jaded veteran war photographer Lee Smith and journalist colleague Joel meet with their mentor Sammy to share their plan to interview the isolated president.Lee and Joel are headed to Washington, D.C., to interview the president before his likely capture, while Sammy joins them to catch a ride to the WF frontline at Charlottesville, Virginia.The group spends the night at a refugee camp before passing through a small town where, under watchful guard, residents attempt to live in ignorance of the war.The trio embed themselves with the WF as they assault the White House, where Jessie repeatedly endangers herself during fighting to capture photographs, while Lee struggles with post-traumatic stress disorder from the carnage.Advancing through the largely-abandoned building filled with dead staffers, an abortive attempt by a single Secret Service agent to negotiate the president's surrender and safe passage results in the shooting down of the female aide.Additional cast members Jared Shaw, Justin Garza, Brian Philpot, and Tywaun Tornes as the Western Forces soldiers led by the sergeant in storming the White House.Jesse Plemons, Dunst's real-life husband, makes an uncredited appearance as a racist[8] ultranationalist militant who kills the two journalists who had briefly joined Lee's group en route to Charlottesville, after the original actor backed out about a week before shooting started.[38] On April 17, 2024, A24 promoted the film on Instagram by posting five images created by artificial intelligence (AI), each showing a different American city in postapocalyptic disarray.[4][5] In the United States and Canada, the film was projected to gross $18–24 million from 3,838 theaters (the widest-ever R-rated release by an independent studio) in its opening weekend.The website's consensus reads: "Tough and unsettling by design, Civil War is a gripping close-up look at the violent uncertainty of life in a nation in crisis.[51] Following the SXSW premiere, Rotten Tomatoes noted that critics called the film "a gorgeously shot cautionary tale full of big ideas and a fantastic performance by Kirsten Dunst, but it may surprise some viewers".[53] Lovia Gyarkye of The Hollywood Reporter also gave the film a positive review, writing: "With the precision and length of its violent battle sequences, it's clear Civil War operates as a clarion call."[6] Manohla Dargis of The New York Times echoed the sentiment, writing: "Rarely have I seen a movie that made me so acutely uncomfortable or watched an actor's face that, like Dunst's, expressed a nation's soul-sickness so vividly that it felt like an X-ray.[55][56] Valerie Complex of Deadline Hollywood offered negative comments, writing: "The script's utilization of characters of color as conduits for brutality needed to be explored further ..."[58] Eisa Nefertari Ulen, writing for The Hollywood Reporter, also found that the film, despite being "otherwise solid," was partially missing its point, stating: "Casablanca endures because it spoke to a moment as 'crazy and mixed-up' as this one, and nudged the country away from its isolationist inaction.
The film's world premiere at South by Southwest
Dunst at the film's world premiere. Her performance was widely praised, even by the film's detractors. [ 49 ]
Civil War (disambiguation)Alex GarlandAndrew MacdonaldGregory GoodmanKirsten DunstWagner MouraCailee SpaenyStephen McKinley HendersonSonoya MizunoNick OffermanRob HardyJake RobertsBen SalisburyGeoff BarrowDNA FilmsIPR.VCEntertainment Film Distributorsdystopianactionthriller filmwar journalistsNew York CityWashington, D.C.civil warfederal governmentsecessionistAtlantaGeorgiaLondonSouth by Southwestthird-termCaliforniasoutheastFloridasuicide bombingwar photographerCharlottesville, Virginiaexecutingmass graveSecret ServiceWhite Housepost-traumatic stress disorderpresidential limousineOval Officesummarily executeMagnum PhotosWorld War IILee MillerReutersThe New York Timesembedded withJefferson WhitecameramanNelson LeeHong KongKarl GlusmanJin HaJonica T. GibbsJuani FelizJames YaegashiEdmund DonovanPresident of the United StatesJesse PlemonsultranationalistThe Daily Telegraphjust far enough aheadsci-fiuncredited rolePrincipal photographyDJI Ronin 4DCaty MaxeyStone Mountain, GeorgiaTyler Perry StudiosThe GuardianGlenn FreemantleFramestoreSilver ApplesSuicideDe La SoulSay No GoSkid RowSturgill SimpsonDream Baby DreamBFI IMAXEntertainment FilmDolby Cinemavideo on demandBlu-rayUltra HD Blu-rayLionsgate Home Entertainment29th Busan International Film FestivalInstagramimages created by artificial intelligenceChicagoMarina CityChicago RiverThe Hollywood ReporterR-ratedindependentHereditaryVarietyreview aggregatorRotten TomatoesMetacriticweighted averageL.A. riotsMatt Zoller SeitzRogerEbert.comThe Year of Living DangerouslyWelcome to SarajevoManohla DargisThe Washington PostDeadline HollywoodNew York PostSweetgreenKentucky Fried ChickenCasablancaStephanie ZacharekGeorge A. RomeroB moviedemocratic declinepolitical polarizationAACTA International AwardsFebruary 7, 2025Best ActressAmerican Cinema Editors AwardsJanuary 18, 2025Best Edited Feature Film – DramaticArtios AwardsFebruary 12, 2025Outstanding Achievement in Casting – Big Budget Feature (Drama)Astra Film AwardsDecember 8, 2024Astra Midseason Movie AwardsJuly 3, 2024British Independent Film Craft AwardsNovember 26, 2024Best CinematographyBest Costume DesignBest EditingBest EffectsBest Production DesignBest SoundGolden Trailer AwardsHollywood Professional Association AwardsOutstanding Sound – Theatrical FeatureLocation Managers Guild International AwardsSan Diego Film Critics SocietyDecember 9, 2024Saturn AwardsFebruary 2, 2025Best Thriller FilmBest Film EditingSet Decorators Society of AmericaBest Achievement in Décor/Design of a Contemporary Feature FilmSt. Louis Film Critics AssociationDecember 15, 2024Visual Effects Society AwardsFebruary 11, 2025Outstanding Supporting Visual Effects in a Photoreal FeatureOutstanding Created Environment in a Photoreal FeatureWashington D.C. Area Film Critics AssociationIndieWireBox Office MojoThe NumbersARTnewsPolygonStarburstLos Angeles TimesFar Out MagazineHardy, Rob [@rdhardy]WSB-TVTheWrapThe RingerScreen RantRadio TimesBritish Film InstituteBusiness InsiderFandango MediaZoller Seitz, MattDargis, ManohlaZacharek, StephanieColliderThe AstrasThe BeachThe TesseractThe ComaEx MachinaAnnihilationWarfare28 Days LaterSunshineNever Let Me Go28 Years Later