Reviews now on YouTube! | Watch here

Larsen On Film

  • Review Library
  • Subscribe
  • Why I’m Wrong
  • About
  • Books

Synecdoche, New York

Screenwriter Charlie Kaufman makes his directorial debut with Synecdoche, New York, which means his artistic self-doubt, romantic pessimism and emotional nihilism is completely unfiltered. Kaufman’s stand-in/hero is Caden Cotard (Philip Seymour Hoffman), a theater director in Schenectady, New York, whose self-pity and hypochondria lead to a separation from his exhausted wife (Catherine Keener) and dazed daughter (Sadie Goldstein).
Left on his own, Caden descends into a series of mental rabbit holes, in which his increasingly miserable life flashes forward by the decades while he mounts a gargantuan stage production based on – you guessed it – his miserable life. The movie’s ultimate goal is to capture, communicate and understand severe psychological malaise, which it does all too well. You leave the picture fully convinced that life disappoints, then you die.

Recent Reviews

Hocus Pocus (1993)

Family Rated PG

“I have to admire anything that tries to play in the same sandbox as Beetlejuice and The Nightmare Before Christmas…”

Hedda (2025)

Drama Rated R

“… pushes the title character toward something demon-possessed, if not demonic.”

Reds (1981)

Drama Rated PG

“Warren Beatty cracked the biopic code…”


Search Review Library

Sponsored by the following | become a sponsor



SUBSCRIBE


Sign up to receive emails

Sign up to get new reviews and updates delivered to your inbox!

Please wait...

Thank you for signing up!




FOLLOW ONLINE



All rights reserved. All Content ©2024 J. Larsen
maintained by Big Ocean Studios

TOP