The movie

Don’t Worry Darling

A daring, mysterious, and visually sensational psychological thriller from director Olivia Wilde with phenomenal performances from Florence Pugh and Harry Styles, joined by an impressive and outstanding cast.

Length: 123 min
Country: United States of America
Language spoken: English
Language subtitles: Dutch
Cast: Florence Pugh, Harry Styles, Olivia Wilde, Gemma Chan, KiKi Layne, Chris Pine,Nick Kroll,Sydney Chandler, Kate Berlant,Asif Ali,Douglas Smith,Timothy Simons,Ari’el Stachel
Director: Olivia Wilde
Release date: 22/09/2022

Description

Don't Worry Darling' is a daring, mysterious, and visually sensational psychological thriller from director Olivia Wilde with phenomenal performances from Florence Pugh and Harry Styles, joined by an impressive and outstanding cast. The 1950s: Alice (Pugh) and Jack (Styles) are lucky to live in the exemplary town of Victory, an experimental community for the families of the men who work for the top-secret Victory Project. The CEO is Frank (Chris Pine), a visionary businessman, motivator and life coach, the epitome of 1950s social optimism that dominates every aspect of everyday life in this utopian desert town. While the men work every day in the main building of the Victory Project on ‘advanced materials development’, their wives spend their time enjoying the luxuries and excesses of their community. Life is perfect and the company caters to the needs of every resident. All it asks is unconditional devotion to Victory. But when cracks begin to appear in their idyllic lives that suggest something sinister lurks behind the attractive facade, Alice is forced to wonder what they're actually doing in Victory and why they're there. How much is Alice willing to lose to expose what really goes on in this paradise?

‘Olivia Wilde’s second theatrical feature is, above all, a ‘Look what I can do!” filmmaker flex in service of an all-in movie star performance from Florence Pugh… It’s consistently entertaining, with more than enough cinematic spit-n-polish to justify a babysitter and big-screen theatrical viewing… Wilde directs the hell out of this thing. Even if you guess the destination, there is plenty to chew on during the journey.’—Scott Mendelson, Forbes