Directed and written by Ari Aster, known for Hereditary and Midsommar, Eddington marks his daring foray into the Western genre—reimagined through the fractured lens of the COVID-19 era. Described as a neo-Western satirical black comedy, the film debuted in competition at Cannes in May 2025 and lands in U.S. theaters on July 18, 2025.
Synopsis & Themes
Set in May 2020 in the small town of Eddington, New Mexico, the story unfolds when Sheriff Joe Cross (Joaquin Phoenix), a man with asthma who refuses to wear a mask, locks horns with Mayor Ted Garcia (Pedro Pascal) in a mayoral showdown that ignites division across the community. Their feud underscores deeper social fractures—pandemic paranoia, Black Lives Matter protests, conspiracy theories, and systemic distrust converge in explosive, surreal ways.
Ari Aster strips away ideology to reveal how fear and isolation can quickly spiral into chaos. It’s less about blame and more about how swiftly humanity can lose its grip on truth.
Critical Reception & Impact
The premiere at Cannes drew a prolonged standing ovation, but responses were sharply divided. Some hailed its fearless commentary on social fragmentation; others found its presentation too raw and discomforting. Still, many view Eddington as a necessary reflection on today’s realities.
RogerEbert.com notes: “Aster turns the chaos of 2020 into a Western nightmare.” IndieWire ranked it among the “100 Best Movies of the 2020s (So Far),” calling it “brilliant and brutally relevant.”
Final Word
Eddington stands out as one of 2025’s most daring films—a Western that uses satire and social tension to mirror the fractures of our time. Ari Aster delivers a cinematic mirror that’s as disquieting as it is visually striking, leaving audiences unsettled but reflective. For fans of genre-bending narratives that don’t shy away from complexity, it’s essential viewing.