Bodies Bodies Bodies (2022, D: Reijn) S: Stenberg, Bakalova, Herrold, Wonders, Sennott, Davidson, Pace
#1
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Bodies Bodies Bodies (2022, D: Reijn) S: Stenberg, Bakalova, Herrold, Wonders, Sennott, Davidson, Pace

From Halina Reijn and starring Amandla Stenberg, Maria Bakalova, Myha'la Herrold, Chase Sui Wonders, Rachel Sennot, with Lee Pace and Pete Davidson. BODIES BODIES BODIES – Only In Theaters August 5.
When a group of rich 20-somethings plan a hurricane party at a remote family mansion, a party game turns deadly in this fresh and funny look at backstabbing, fake friends, and one party gone very, very wrong.
RELEASE DATE: August 5
DIRECTOR: Halina Reijn
CAST: Amandla Stenberg, Maria Bakalova, Myha'la Herrold, Chase Sui Wonders, Rachel Sennot, with Lee Pace and Pete Davidson
When a group of rich 20-somethings plan a hurricane party at a remote family mansion, a party game turns deadly in this fresh and funny look at backstabbing, fake friends, and one party gone very, very wrong.
RELEASE DATE: August 5
DIRECTOR: Halina Reijn
CAST: Amandla Stenberg, Maria Bakalova, Myha'la Herrold, Chase Sui Wonders, Rachel Sennot, with Lee Pace and Pete Davidson
#2
DVD Talk Legend
re: Bodies Bodies Bodies (2022, D: Reijn) S: Stenberg, Bakalova, Herrold, Wonders, Sennott, Davidson, Pace
Maybe I'm turning into an old fart, but that looks insufferable
#3
DVD Talk Hero
re: Bodies Bodies Bodies (2022, D: Reijn) S: Stenberg, Bakalova, Herrold, Wonders, Sennott, Davidson, Pace
It does look like it’s aimed directly at young millennials (are teens still considered “millennials” or are they called something else now?).
Pete Davidson looks like he accidentally wandered in off the street and was just left in the movie.
Pete Davidson looks like he accidentally wandered in off the street and was just left in the movie.
#4
DVD Talk Hero
#5
Thread Starter
Moderator
re: Bodies Bodies Bodies (2022, D: Reijn) S: Stenberg, Bakalova, Herrold, Wonders, Sennott, Davidson, Pace
#6
DVD Talk Hero
re: Bodies Bodies Bodies (2022, D: Reijn) S: Stenberg, Bakalova, Herrold, Wonders, Sennott, Davidson, Pace
This looks painful.
#7
Thread Starter
Moderator
re: Bodies Bodies Bodies (2022, D: Reijn) S: Stenberg, Bakalova, Herrold, Wonders, Sennott, Davidson, Pace
Reviews seem very positive.
#8
Thread Starter
Moderator
re: Bodies Bodies Bodies (2022, D: Reijn) S: Stenberg, Bakalova, Herrold, Wonders, Sennott, Davidson, Pace
Opens this weekend.
#9
Thread Starter
Moderator
re: Bodies Bodies Bodies (2022, D: Reijn) S: Stenberg, Bakalova, Herrold, Wonders, Sennott, Davidson, Pace
A24’s Bodies Bodies Bodies hit theaters with the highest per-screen average this weekend in a limited opening, and the second best of the year. That record was set last spring with Everything Everywhere All at Once as this indie distributor piles up successes.
Halina Reijn’s Gen-Z whodunnit comedy grossed $226,526 on six screens in NY and LA for a PSA of $37,754. Everything Everywhere opened to over half a million dollars on 10 screens in NYC, LA and San Francisco in late March for a PSA of $50,965, a pre-Covid kind of number.
Bodies, a fresh take on the murder mystery in a stormy house party game gone awry, with a young ensemble cast of Amandla Stenberg, Maria Bakalova, Pete Davidson, Rachel Sennott, Myha’la Herrold, Chase Sui Wonders and Lee Pace, expands to about 1,200 screens next weekend.
The film, which premiered at SXSW, had sellouts on both coasts where it played NYC’s Lincoln Square, Union Square, Alamo Drafthouse Brooklyn, and LA’s AMC Century City, Grove and Burbank. With a 91% from critics and an 80% audience score on Rotten Tomatoes, Bodies looks well set up for a strong run through the rest of summer and beyond for A24, which has had tremendous success slinging arthouse fare for key younger demos.
Halina Reijn’s Gen-Z whodunnit comedy grossed $226,526 on six screens in NY and LA for a PSA of $37,754. Everything Everywhere opened to over half a million dollars on 10 screens in NYC, LA and San Francisco in late March for a PSA of $50,965, a pre-Covid kind of number.
Bodies, a fresh take on the murder mystery in a stormy house party game gone awry, with a young ensemble cast of Amandla Stenberg, Maria Bakalova, Pete Davidson, Rachel Sennott, Myha’la Herrold, Chase Sui Wonders and Lee Pace, expands to about 1,200 screens next weekend.
The film, which premiered at SXSW, had sellouts on both coasts where it played NYC’s Lincoln Square, Union Square, Alamo Drafthouse Brooklyn, and LA’s AMC Century City, Grove and Burbank. With a 91% from critics and an 80% audience score on Rotten Tomatoes, Bodies looks well set up for a strong run through the rest of summer and beyond for A24, which has had tremendous success slinging arthouse fare for key younger demos.
#10
DVD Talk Limited Edition
re: Bodies Bodies Bodies (2022, D: Reijn) S: Stenberg, Bakalova, Herrold, Wonders, Sennott, Davidson, Pace
This felt like a decent 45-minute short that was padded out to turn it into a full length feature. There's a solid first half here and Maria Bakalova is reasonably appealing as the shy "outsider" trying to fit in with the shallow rich kids, but then the movie deteriorates into a lot of contrived scenes of clueless characters arguing back and forth as they reveal dark secrets and hidden hostilities...until we get to a final dumb twist ending. Yes, the movie is meant to be more of a satire than a slasher film as it pokes fun at these annoying, self-obsessed Gen-Z'ers, but the humor doesn't have enough wit or bite. Never been a huge fan of Pete Davidson, but his rancid, self-aware douchebag was the most interesting character, and the movie needed more of him.
#11
Thread Starter
Moderator
re: Bodies Bodies Bodies (2022, D: Reijn) S: Stenberg, Bakalova, Herrold, Wonders, Sennott, Davidson, Pace
Definitely more satire than slasher. I got quite a few laughs out of.
Rachel Sennott and Pete Davidson were the highlights for me.
Rachel Sennott and Pete Davidson were the highlights for me.
#12
Re: Bodies Bodies Bodies (2022, D: Reijn) S: Stenberg, Bakalova, Herrold, Wonders, Sennott, Davidson, Pac
I was very impressed with Pete Davidson in King Of Staten Island, so I was surprised to see him on the poster for this, as it seems like a step-down for him. I'll be checking it out anyway this week. Maybe the ads aren't properly representing the movie.
#13
Thread Starter
Moderator
Re: Bodies Bodies Bodies (2022, D: Reijn) S: Stenberg, Bakalova, Herrold, Wonders, Sennott, Davidson, Pac
It’s being marketed to the demographic it is satirizing.
#14
DVD Talk God
Re: Bodies Bodies Bodies (2022, D: Reijn) S: Stenberg, Bakalova, Herrold, Wonders, Sennott, Davidson, Pac
I saw this today. Honestly I didn't really like it. The girls were all insufferable and entitled assholes. And yeah it was definitely not horror and more satire of the genre. I did get a few laughs, but not enough for me to actually say this was a good movie.
I also thought it was too much of a coincidence that all the deaths were:
I also thought it was too much of a coincidence that all the deaths were:
Spoiler:
#15
Thread Starter
Moderator
Re: Bodies Bodies Bodies (2022, D: Reijn) S: Stenberg, Bakalova, Herrold, Wonders, Sennott, Davidson, Pac
I always love these emails that A24 sends out with notes from the directors.
A Note from Halina Reijn
08.12.2022
Dear Friends,
My parents were radical hippies and thought watching TV, let alone film, at a young age, would be disruptive for the development of a child’s brain and soul. Because both of them were artists, they would paint, meditate, and sculpt clay all day long in their studio in the backyard, which forced them to get us a babysitter. The local villager had no idea what to do with us since we weren’t allowed to have plastic toys, or any other device to help her entertain us. Bored with the wooden blocks that were supposed to trigger our imagination, she decided to take us to the cinema.
Completely unaware of the anthroposophical philosophy my parents lived by, she enthusiastically took us to see Annie. I was six and my sister was eight. This experience completely disrupted my soul, it changed my DNA forever. When I came home, I told my parents we had to move to America for me to become a child prodigy, just like Annie. I thought Aileen Quinn had created that film and shot it herself, so I devoted the rest of my life to try to become her.
When thirty years later, I was on stage working around the clock for the most brilliant director in the world, Ivo van Hove, I started to obsessively think of Annie again and realized over and over, she didn't make that film herself. Even though I loved being Ophelia, Hedda Gabler, Maria Stuart and The Shrew that was tamed, part of me yearned to create a story of my own.
Of all the classical plays I was a part of, the theme of self-destruction and power weaved its way through all of them. Why do humans, even though they think they are enlightened and civilized, do stuff that is bad for them? When we shot Black Book, I would always nag Paul Verhoeven that my dream was to be a director myself. He said that for me to create my own story I needed a question. “Why am I attracted to what is bad for me?,” inspired me to create Instinct based on a true story about a therapist who falls in love with a rapist she is treating in jail. “Is the beast inside or outside of us?” made me connect to Bodies Bodies Bodies. After all the beautiful tragedies I was part of on stage, it was the most miraculous journey, to try and make people laugh. Dark humor is a great key and weapon to discuss the absurdity of life.
A year and a half ago, at 9 pm, just after dinner, back in my kitchen in Amsterdam, my phone rang. It was our producer, David Hinojosa, telling me that I would have to take a flight to New York the next day at 3 pm. There was a travel-ban in place, so there would be no way back. All I thought of was Annie and my wish to move to America to become part of the creative dream factory that had changed my DNA forever when I was 6.
Arriving here during the aftermath of the first Covid wave was the loneliest period of my life. I was 45 and felt the American dream that Annie showed me was an illusion. I didn't have an identity anymore. In Amsterdam I had it all: friends, family, a job, a beautiful house, a wonderful partner, a production company with my best friend, my fame, (that I thought I hated, but that I missed tremendously when it was gone) and a government that would take care of you in case you fell off the wagon. There was none of that here. Just rats and cockroaches that would look as though I was trying to invade their personal space when I walked the streets of the Big Apple. All I wanted to do was go home.
Bee’s (Maria Bakalova) primal need to belong to a group, to be accepted, to be seen and heard and held and loved, was my own hunger for all of that. We all think we are aliens or imposters, at times, no matter where we are in life. It takes incredible courage to trust and believe in our own unique path, through darkness and in light.
Making this film in the land I had dreamed to be part of since I was six, was the hardest and the most beautiful experience of my life. Working with genius writer, Sarah Delappe on the screenplay, making it our own, finding the insanely talented cast, who were ready to open up to a process in which we pretended to be a theatre ensemble, with no ego, and extremely thorough preparation, only 25 shooting days, working around the clock to create a story together, as collaborators, that would address group behavior, the need to belong and what goes wrong when people fail to look into each other’s eyes to actually see what is happening, was truly magical on a soul level.
Shooting incredibly long takes of incredibly long scenes (Some were 15 pages long) created an acting style that was sensuous, truthful, authentic, and funny. It demanded everything from the cast. Not only did they have to operate as an experienced ensemble, but also, the shoot was technically demanding, dealing with rain, wind, cold and underwater shots. All of them were excellent and completely devoted. All of them shine in this film, in their own unique way, and together as a group. They nested themselves in my heart and will be there forever.
Seeing the film in a theater, here in America, with an audience, has been the most wonderful experience ever. The warmth and openness of the people has touched my heart deeply. I am so very grateful I am here. I fell in love with this land, with the city, with the genius, creative, beautiful people I was lucky to meet, with my new identity, and the rats and the cockroaches alike. I feel as if I was just born, and I can only dream and hope to continue to be creative on this soil.
The sun will come out tomorrow, Annie said. I am sure it will.
Halina Reijn
08.12.2022
Dear Friends,
My parents were radical hippies and thought watching TV, let alone film, at a young age, would be disruptive for the development of a child’s brain and soul. Because both of them were artists, they would paint, meditate, and sculpt clay all day long in their studio in the backyard, which forced them to get us a babysitter. The local villager had no idea what to do with us since we weren’t allowed to have plastic toys, or any other device to help her entertain us. Bored with the wooden blocks that were supposed to trigger our imagination, she decided to take us to the cinema.
Completely unaware of the anthroposophical philosophy my parents lived by, she enthusiastically took us to see Annie. I was six and my sister was eight. This experience completely disrupted my soul, it changed my DNA forever. When I came home, I told my parents we had to move to America for me to become a child prodigy, just like Annie. I thought Aileen Quinn had created that film and shot it herself, so I devoted the rest of my life to try to become her.
When thirty years later, I was on stage working around the clock for the most brilliant director in the world, Ivo van Hove, I started to obsessively think of Annie again and realized over and over, she didn't make that film herself. Even though I loved being Ophelia, Hedda Gabler, Maria Stuart and The Shrew that was tamed, part of me yearned to create a story of my own.
Of all the classical plays I was a part of, the theme of self-destruction and power weaved its way through all of them. Why do humans, even though they think they are enlightened and civilized, do stuff that is bad for them? When we shot Black Book, I would always nag Paul Verhoeven that my dream was to be a director myself. He said that for me to create my own story I needed a question. “Why am I attracted to what is bad for me?,” inspired me to create Instinct based on a true story about a therapist who falls in love with a rapist she is treating in jail. “Is the beast inside or outside of us?” made me connect to Bodies Bodies Bodies. After all the beautiful tragedies I was part of on stage, it was the most miraculous journey, to try and make people laugh. Dark humor is a great key and weapon to discuss the absurdity of life.
A year and a half ago, at 9 pm, just after dinner, back in my kitchen in Amsterdam, my phone rang. It was our producer, David Hinojosa, telling me that I would have to take a flight to New York the next day at 3 pm. There was a travel-ban in place, so there would be no way back. All I thought of was Annie and my wish to move to America to become part of the creative dream factory that had changed my DNA forever when I was 6.
Arriving here during the aftermath of the first Covid wave was the loneliest period of my life. I was 45 and felt the American dream that Annie showed me was an illusion. I didn't have an identity anymore. In Amsterdam I had it all: friends, family, a job, a beautiful house, a wonderful partner, a production company with my best friend, my fame, (that I thought I hated, but that I missed tremendously when it was gone) and a government that would take care of you in case you fell off the wagon. There was none of that here. Just rats and cockroaches that would look as though I was trying to invade their personal space when I walked the streets of the Big Apple. All I wanted to do was go home.
Bee’s (Maria Bakalova) primal need to belong to a group, to be accepted, to be seen and heard and held and loved, was my own hunger for all of that. We all think we are aliens or imposters, at times, no matter where we are in life. It takes incredible courage to trust and believe in our own unique path, through darkness and in light.
Making this film in the land I had dreamed to be part of since I was six, was the hardest and the most beautiful experience of my life. Working with genius writer, Sarah Delappe on the screenplay, making it our own, finding the insanely talented cast, who were ready to open up to a process in which we pretended to be a theatre ensemble, with no ego, and extremely thorough preparation, only 25 shooting days, working around the clock to create a story together, as collaborators, that would address group behavior, the need to belong and what goes wrong when people fail to look into each other’s eyes to actually see what is happening, was truly magical on a soul level.
Shooting incredibly long takes of incredibly long scenes (Some were 15 pages long) created an acting style that was sensuous, truthful, authentic, and funny. It demanded everything from the cast. Not only did they have to operate as an experienced ensemble, but also, the shoot was technically demanding, dealing with rain, wind, cold and underwater shots. All of them were excellent and completely devoted. All of them shine in this film, in their own unique way, and together as a group. They nested themselves in my heart and will be there forever.
Seeing the film in a theater, here in America, with an audience, has been the most wonderful experience ever. The warmth and openness of the people has touched my heart deeply. I am so very grateful I am here. I fell in love with this land, with the city, with the genius, creative, beautiful people I was lucky to meet, with my new identity, and the rats and the cockroaches alike. I feel as if I was just born, and I can only dream and hope to continue to be creative on this soil.
The sun will come out tomorrow, Annie said. I am sure it will.
Halina Reijn
#16
Re: Bodies Bodies Bodies (2022, D: Reijn) S: Stenberg, Bakalova, Herrold, Wonders, Sennott, Davidson, Pac
Spoiler:
I've never heard a more dead theatre audience in my life. Not a single chuckle, not a single sound signifying surprise or enjoyment. By the 30 minute mark, everyone seemed to be numb with boredom.
It's also not photographed or edited very well, making it difficult to see what's even happening in scene after scene, but I guess that wouldn't have improved the movie even if it was.
Hands down the worst thing I've seen this year since Netflix's Texas Chainsaw Massacre. It's just pathetic.
#17
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From: Not necessarily Formerly known as Solid Snake
Re: Bodies Bodies Bodies (2022, D: Reijn) S: Stenberg, Bakalova, Herrold, Wonders, Sennott, Davidson, Pac
Huh. An A24 that I have NO desire whatsoever to see. Strange things happen.
#18
Re: Bodies Bodies Bodies (2022, D: Reijn) S: Stenberg, Bakalova, Herrold, Wonders, Sennott, Davidson, Pac
I actually liked this quite a bit. I'm not a big horror fan, so I was glad it's more of a whodunit thriller. The characters all felt very real and there were a lot of keen observations on relationship dynamics in the age of social media. There's some satire for sure, but I didn't think the movie was outright making fun of the characters. They are treated with a certain level of dignity.
Not something I would go out of my way to see again, but one of the better ones I've seen in what has been a pretty dire summer slate.
Not something I would go out of my way to see again, but one of the better ones I've seen in what has been a pretty dire summer slate.
#19
DVD Talk Legend
Re: Bodies Bodies Bodies (2022, D: Reijn) S: Stenberg, Bakalova, Herrold, Wonders, Sennott, Davidson, Pac
I agree with rocket. I enjoyed that this was more mystery/thriller than horror. Although I thought the horror manipulations were used to good effect.
So I thought that was clever, and if a movie is smarter than me, then I give it credit.
It was interesting that my reaction to all these 20-somethings was that I hated them from the instant I met them and as the plot progressed, I was sort of rooting for them to kill each other off, but now I realize that was the intention, so again the movie was ahead of me.
I saw this for free, so I can't say whether it is worth buying a ticket for because I suspect a lot of people would not enjoy this.
I want to give a shout out to Rachel Sennott because I actually wanted to crawl into the screen and kill her myself, so she was doing some good acting.

She's the one on the right
Spoiler:
So I thought that was clever, and if a movie is smarter than me, then I give it credit.
It was interesting that my reaction to all these 20-somethings was that I hated them from the instant I met them and as the plot progressed, I was sort of rooting for them to kill each other off, but now I realize that was the intention, so again the movie was ahead of me.
I saw this for free, so I can't say whether it is worth buying a ticket for because I suspect a lot of people would not enjoy this.
I want to give a shout out to Rachel Sennott because I actually wanted to crawl into the screen and kill her myself, so she was doing some good acting.

She's the one on the right
#20
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From: Detroit, formerly known as Obi-Wanma
Re: Bodies Bodies Bodies (2022, D: Reijn) S: Stenberg, Bakalova, Herrold, Wonders, Sennott, Davidson, Pac
I also enjoyed the film. It was fun.
I really like the Charli XCX tune from the trailer too.
I really like the Charli XCX tune from the trailer too.
#21
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From: "Are any of us really anywhere?"
Re: Bodies Bodies Bodies (2022, D: Reijn) S: Stenberg, Bakalova, Herrold, Wonders, Sennott, Davidson, Pac
I thought this was really good. Surprisingly so. It starts shaky and truthfully I thought this was horror movie, but really is a murder mystery like the director mentions on the Blu-ray extras. The actors were surprisingly convincing and I had no idea of the outcome, but it sure made sense. Really solid effort.
#22
DVD Talk Hero
Re: Bodies Bodies Bodies (2022, D: Reijn) S: Stenberg, Bakalova, Herrold, Wonders, Sennott, Davidson, Pac
Just watched this.
It was aggressively terrible. The good thing about it was the last 2 minutes…
seriously, though… what a bad film.
It was aggressively terrible. The good thing about it was the last 2 minutes…
Spoiler:
seriously, though… what a bad film.
#23
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From: Not necessarily Formerly known as Solid Snake
Re: Bodies Bodies Bodies (2022, D: Reijn) S: Stenberg, Bakalova, Herrold, Wonders, Sennott, Davidson, Pac
I thought it was horribly predictable, but still liked what it was trying to accomplish with that: the machinations of convincing ourselves that the world is ONLY as WE see it.
As soon as the second death happened, the twist was obvious, and the theme emerged: self-destruction due to our own personal blindness. Whether that was the drug use, the toxic relationships, the new relationships (where the person did not really know their lover), the outsiders, the missing Max … it was self-harming delusions.
No, I didn’t like any of the characters, but I did not have my usual level
of loathing that I have for “lifestyle porn” (in this case, rich kid party movies). While the characters were definitely stuck up their own asses, they did have a level of self-realization, albeit directed externally at their “friends.”
Didn’t care for it when I watched it and wouldn’t really recommend it, but it does still have me reflecting on it the next morning, so I guess it was a good enough one night stand.
#24
DVD Talk Hall of Fame
Re: Bodies Bodies Bodies (2022, D: Reijn) S: Stenberg, Bakalova, Herrold, Wonders, Sennott, Davidson, Pac
I streamed this the other day on Prime. The characters were so unlikable I wanted Art The Clown to show up and dispose of them in worse ways than how they actually died. This film just reminded me that I have hated young people ever since I was one.




