post_page_cover

Fingernails Featured, Reviews Film Threat

Sep 24, 2023

TORONTO INTERNATIONAL FILM FESTIVAL 2023 REVIEW! Director Christos Nikou’s Fingernails is set in an alternate reality where, at the mere cost of having one of your fingernails ripped out, a machine can tell you whether you as a couple are right for each other. This is facilitated by the Love Institute, where they also do a bizarre form of couples counseling, including having people stare at each other underwater.

“…things may not be as perfect as they seem when Anna secretly gets a job at the Love Institute…”
Written by Nikou, Stavros Raptis, and Sam Steiner, the movie follows Anna (Jessie Buckley), an elementary school teacher in a relationship with Ryan (Jeremy Allen White). The two have been through the test and have the certificate to show they are a match. But things may not be as perfect as they seem when Anna secretly gets a job at the Love Institute without telling her partner. There, she trains under Duncan (Luke Wilson), who pairs her with Amir (Riz Ahmed). As Anna gets closer and closer to Amir, she starts to wonder if Ryan really is her one true love, no matter what the machine says.
If you’ve seen the absurdist pictures of Yorgos Lanthimos, like The Lobster, you have some kind of idea what you’re in for with Fingernails. In fact, Nikou was an assistant director on Dogtooth. He derives plenty of humor from its absurd premise and situations, but it is more focused and less zany than the titles of Lanthimos. Yes, the setup is wacky, but it is real to the characters and treats them seriously. There’s a fine line between setting up your absurdist reality for laughs and having it be taken seriously enough to have an impact. The filmmaker threads that needle perfectly.

Disclaimer: This story is auto-aggregated by a computer program and has not been created or edited by filmibee.
Publisher: Source link

YOU MIGHT ALSO LIKE
The Running Man Review | Flickreel

Two of the Stephen King adaptations we’ve gotten this year have revolved around “games.” In The Long Walk, a group of young recruits must march forward until the last man is left standing. At least one person was inclined to…

Dec 15, 2025

Diane Kruger Faces a Mother’s Worst Nightmare in Paramount+’s Gripping Psychological Thriller

It's no easy feat being a mother — and the constant vigilance in anticipation of a baby's cry, the sleepless nights, and the continuous need to anticipate any potential harm before it happens can be exhausting. In Little Disasters, the…

Dec 15, 2025

It’s a Swordsman Versus a Band of Cannibals With Uneven Results

A traditional haiku is anchored around the invocation of nature's most ubiquitous objects and occurrences. Thunder, rain, rocks, waterfalls. In the short poems, the complexity of these images, typically taken for granted, are plumbed for their depth to meditate on…

Dec 13, 2025

Train Dreams Review: A Life in Fragments

Clint Bentley’s Train Dreams, adapted from Denis Johnson’s 2011 novella, is one of those rare literary-to-film transitions that feels both delicate and vast—an intimate portrait delivered on an epic historical canvas. With Bentley co-writing alongside Greg Kwedar, the film becomes…

Dec 13, 2025