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    Movie Review

    Aubrey Plaza puts a fresh spin on body switching movies in My Old Ass

    Alex Bentley
    Sep 26, 2024 | 4:15 pm
    Maisy Stella and Aubrey Plaza in My Old Ass

    Maisy Stella and Aubrey Plaza in My Old Ass.

    Photo by Marni Grossman/courtesy of Amazon Content Services LLC

    Starting with 1976’s Freaky Friday, there is a long tradition of body switch movies where kids trade bodies with their parents. Similarly, films like Big and 13 Going on 30 have a child transform into an older version of themselves. A heretofore untapped version of this kind of magical realism is on display in My Old Ass, a film that blends R-rated comedy with a surprisingly emotional core.



    Elliott (Maisy Stella) is an 18-year-old Canadian high school senior on the verge of going to college and leaving her parents, two brothers, and the family’s cranberry farm. On a celebratory camping trip with her two best friends, Ro (Kerrice Brooks) and Ruthie (Maddie Ziegler), Elliott drinks a tea made with hallucinogenic mushrooms. She soon encounters a woman (Aubrey Plaza) who claims to be the 39-year-old version of herself.

    The older Elliott doesn’t stay contained within the hallucination, though, and the two are soon texting and talking on the phone. Pleas from the younger Elliott about her future mostly go unanswered, save for one: Elliott the elder says that she should stay away from any guys named Chad, a request that proves difficult when Chad (Percy Hynes White) starts working at the family farm.

    Written and directed by Megan Park, the film at first feels like it’s going to go down the road of recent bawdy films led by young women like Blockers, Booksmart, and Yes, God, Yes. And while the film has its fair share of sexual situations and profane dialogue, it has more on its mind than whether or not its characters have sex. Elliott says she’s always considered herself to be gay, but spending time around Chad has her questioning her sexual identity.

    The concept of having Elliott interact directly with her older self is a fun one and leads to some great moments, but in an interesting and perhaps bold move, Park steers away from it for a good portion of the film. When the older Elliott stops communicating, the younger version is forced to fend for herself in how she deals with Chad, her family, and more. This leads to a shift in tone that is much more heartfelt than expected.

    The switch back-and-forth between the sharply different tones is a tough one to pull off well, but Park makes it seem easy. She has a deft touch at revealing universal truths through small moments, and in so doing, she has made a film that is refreshingly honest and true-to-life. The idea that you can accomplish a feat like that in a film that starts with its main character taking mushrooms and manifesting her older self is astonishing.

    Although Nashville fans will know Stella from that show’s six-season run that ended in 2018, this is the 21-year-old’s first film role, and to say that she shows herself to be a star is an understatement. She brings all the human qualities you could want in a coming-of-age story, and never lets the concept overwhelm her performance. Plaza is a known quantity from Parks & Recreation and more, and she offers a great counterbalance of reality to Stella’s youthful optimism.

    My Old Ass is in-your-face with its title, but that slight crassness is soon overtaken by the film’s fun concept, its insightful storytelling, and a collection of actors who know how to play things just right. It’s a great comedy, but it also has a heart that most films of its ilk don’t possess, making it the best of both worlds.

    ----

    My Old Ass opens in theaters on September 27.

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    Movie Review

    Robert Pattinson and Zendaya face pre-marriage jitters in The Drama

    Alex Bentley
    Apr 3, 2026 | 3:00 pm
    Robert Pattinson and Zendaya in The Drama
    Photo courtesy of A24
    Robert Pattinson and Zendaya in The Drama.

    Robert Pattinson and Zendaya will be seen together a lot at the movies in 2026, with mega-films like The Odyssey and Dune: Part Three coming out later in the year. But fans can get a much more intimate look at the two stars in a film that offers a unique take on relationship struggles, The Drama.

    Emma (Zendaya) and Charlie (Pattinson) are a New York couple who are engaged to be married. After a quick-but-effective montage of their courtship, the story joins them as they are just days away from their wedding. As they get all the details like music, flowers, and food finalized, a visit to the caterer with married friends Rachel (Alana Haim) and Mike (Mamoudou Athie) proves fateful.

    A few too many drinks leads to each member of the group deciding to divulge the worst thing they’ve ever done. While each story is slightly shocking, Emma’s takes the cake, so much so that Charlie starts to question their relationship. As they get closer to the wedding date, Charlie finds it increasingly difficult to get beyond Emma’s revelation, with each real or imagined conversation threatening to derail their previously tight bond.

    Written and directed by Kristoffer Borgli, the film is provocative, funny, and cringey as it tries to get to the center of human dynamics. Charlie, Rachel, and Mike have starkly different reactions to Emma’s story, and the way those play out over the course of the film provides, well, the drama. The harder Charlie tries to justify Emma’s past, the more his underlying feelings start to eat at him, causing friction not just between him and Emma, but in other parts of his life, as well.

    Strangely, especially for a character played by Zendaya, Emma recedes more than expected. Her explanations for her previous actions are timid at best, and she mostly seems to be waiting for Charlie to forgive her instead of questioning why she needs forgiveness. Borgli favors the male side of the equation, and in so doing he doesn’t dig as deep into the root of the issue as he could have.

    Still, the downward spiral at the center of the story has a propulsive nature to it, and each successive step proves to be both hard to watch and impossible to turn away from. It also helps that Borgli manages the tone well, keeping interactions between characters relatively light so that the film doesn’t turn into one like Marriage Story.

    Pattinson, who gets to use his own British accent for once, put on an interesting performance that is much better than his last two roles in Mickey 17 and Die My Love. He has good chemistry with Zendaya, who manages to shine despite being laden with a role that doesn’t play entirely to her strengths. Haim and Athie do good work in small roles, while Hailey Grace and Hannah Gross make an impact in brief appearances.

    The situation in which Emma and Charlie find themselves in The Drama is not one to be wished on anyone, but it’s presented well by Borgli, keeping tensions high for the bulk of the film. Despite the two main characters not given completely equal footing, the story finds a way to get to a satisfactory ending.

    ---

    The Drama opens in theaters on April 3.

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