Sebastian Stan & Adam Pearson interview: Breaking Down That WILD A Different Man Ending
@nicholasgrimshaw via Instagram Story (October 2, 2024)
Sebastian Stan and Adam Pearson are unforgettable as friends and rivals in a beautifully bizarre take on what it means to be human.
By: Sarah Gorr
A Different Man dives into an absurdist exploration of identity
A Different Man is all about what it means to be seen, in all the best and worst ways. It’s what it means to avoid eye contact with the unhoused man on the subway and to gawk at anyone who looks remotely outside the norm. It’s the difference between simply being noticed and being intimately seen, the way only someone who actually understands you can.
Writer and director Aaron Schimberg looks for as many ways as possible to play with these ideas, fitting the seer and seen inside each other in a little matryoshka doll. But first and foremost, our gaze is on Edward.
Adam Pearson isn’t internationally known, but he’s known to rock a microphone. (Matt Infante/A24)
Edward (Sebastian Stan) is a struggling actor with a rare condition that covers his face with large, benign tumors. He’s quiet and reserved. His every movement reveals a discomfort even existing in the world, never mind taking part in it. So when he gets the chance to take an experimental new drug that can completely heal him, he does so without a thought. Reborn as his new, more handsome self, he finally gets what should be the part of a lifetime in a local play based on his life. That is until Oswald, a man with the same condition as Edward, steals the part. In the process, this new arrival reveals just how exactly Edward has actually transformed.
Sebastian Stan captures all the nuance and complexity of Edward as he stumbles through this journey in a manner that’s nothing short of impressive. Hidden behind Mike Marino’s brilliant prosthetics, Stab carries the weight of his performance in body language. The slump of his shoulders, the way his eyes apologetically flit to those around him as if apologizing for even existing. Post-procedure, Stan infuses the performance with Edward’s confusion, frustration, and even unbridled rage. Schimberg’s script is an actor’s dream, and Stan more than lives up to the part.
Renate Reinsve isn’t buying what Sebastian Stan is selling vis a vis a plaid couch. (Matt Infante/A24)
Meanwhile, Adam Pearson’s performance as Edward’s foil, Oswald, was clearly crafted with the actor in mind. It’s an incredible showcase for Pearson’s exuberance and energy. He steal every scene he’s in and gives Edward’s jealousy the perfect excuse to boil over. He embodies everything Edward is not: charming, confident, witty. Pearson’s Oswald is a man you not only want to know but are downright grateful to have in your life.
Together, Pearson and Stan depict a dynamic that is mesmerizing to watch. Does any of Schimberg’s script work half as well without them? Honestly, it’s impossible to imagine.
However, audiences shouldn’t take that as a slight against Schimberg. His script is an intensely rich text, less Beauty and the Beast, more The Scorpion and the Turtle. A Different Man questions not just what’s in a person’s nature but what benefits or inhibits the performance of identity. In art, what makes something feel real or true? What truths benefit a piece? Which hinder? What facets of ourselves we take as inherent truths are anything but?
Sebastian Stan is giving what if autumn was fashion.(Matt Infante/A24)
It’s a film in a constant push/pull with transformation vs. consistency. Permeating it all is a sense of bleakness that seems to radiate from Edward himself. It infects everything from Umberto Smerilli’s bold and moody score to the film’s very texture, with its high contrast, sharp shadows, and rich color. It all comes together as if to say Edward’s insecurities, anxieties, and sadness that can’t seem to disappear as quickly as his features transformed.
Schimberg’s depiction of Edward’s journey to something like a discovery of self is part tragic, fully comic, and delightfully absurd. It’s a distinct film, despite the comparisons to Coralie Fargeat’s The Substance that people are already forming, and more than worth the price of admission.
A Different Man gives face in limited theatres starting September 20 before opening wide on October 4.
@universaluk: Sebastian Stan and Adam Pearson on what they love about the UK. See A DIFFERENT MAN in cinemas NOW. #ADifferentMan #SebastianStan @Adam_Pearson
Sebastian Stan, Adam Pearson & Aaron Schimberg on Change Perception in A Different Man | Q/A
@welovecinemafr: Les fans de Marvel le connaissent en tant que Bucky Barnes, il est cette année l'acteur principal de The Apprentice d'Ali Abbasi, mais aussi de A Different Man d'Aaron Schimberg qu'il présente à @DeauvilleUS : Sebastian Stan est l'un des lauréats du Prix du Nouvel Hollywood de #Deauville2024 ! ✨
@totalfilm: Sebastian Stan says he is interested in hearing people's different reactions to A Different Man, a film that is proving hard to define
@BuzzFeed UK: Self acceptance is key
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@BritishGQ: With an uncanny performance as a young Donald Trump in The Apprentice and an even less recognisable turn in A Different Man, Sebastian Stan is embracing his freaky side
@RottenTomatoes: Sebastian Stan and Adam Pearson share how special it was to work with A24 on #ADifferentMan at #FantasticFest.
@relightalopecia via Instagram Story (October 2, 2024)
@bbc6music: ‘If we get everything we ever want, will we be happy?’ 💚 Wise words from Sebastian Stan and Adam Pearson, who joined Nick to chat about their new film, A Different Man. Listen on @bbcsounds
@brionymaybakes via Instagram Story (October 2, 2024)