Bones and All Review - IGN (2024)

Bones and All is now in theaters.

Luca Guadagnino’s Bones and All is lush, romantic, and brutal. A cannibal road trip movie that fleshes out its mythology akin to vampires or werewolves, it’s a poetic piece of American Gothic horror with unexpected turns rooted in rigorous character drama. Led by stellar performances from, among others, Taylor Russell, Timothée Chalamet, and Mark Rylance, it feels fully lived-in even in its most languid moments, resulting in a work that’s both sweeter and funnier than you’d expect, but no less heart-wrenching.

It begins unassumingly in Virginia in the 1980s, where mixed-race teenage newcomer Maren (Russell) acclimates to her new school and to her wealthier white friends, despite attempts from her father, Frank (André Holland), to keep her sheltered. His reasons become all too clear when Maren sneaks out to a sleepover and, during a moment of physical and emotional intimacy with her classmate, gets carried away and takes a bite out of her finger. When she returns home covered in blood, Frank’s lack of surprise (and the quickness and routineness with which he has her pack up and leave) tells us this has happened before.

It's also the last straw. A few months after they move to Maryland under new identities, he reluctantly abandons Maren in the middle of the night, leaving her with nothing more than her birth certificate — which contains scant details about her estranged mother, who she barely remembers — and a Walkman with a cassette tape explaining his actions, and revealing parts of her bloodthirsty past he’d long kept hidden. Unable to listen to it all at once, she digests his audio confession in increments on the road while taking buses and hitching rides in the hopes of tracking her mother down and finding answers about herself.

This journey, its meetings, and its pitstops serve as a proxy for a tale of self-discovery, one punctuated by the same kind of loneliness and romance Guadagnino brought to Call Me By Your Name. It’s also rife with simmering feelings of queer self-hatred, with an obvious but effective parallel with the movie’s version of cannibalism — or “eaters” — for whom consumption and indulgence can be marked by shame. Guadagnino first taps into these feelings when Maren briefly crosses paths with an eccentric cannibal named Sully (Rylance), who sports a ponytail under a feathered hat, refers to himself in third person, and sniffs our young runaway protagonist from half a mile away. Eaters have a keen sense of smell, we learn from Sully, who not only teaches Maren some of the basics of “their” kind, but functions as a specter of a lonely future, a sort of queer-elder who’s seen the worst of what the world has to offer, and wants to prepare Maren for a life of survival in isolation.

Despite the bloodshed occurring mostly off-screen, there’s a sense of ritualism to eating human flesh — not in a cultural or even occult sense, but as an act of intimacy between two people (whether two eaters, or an eater and the eaten). However, the cannibalism lore takes a backseat when Maren crosses paths with Lee (Chalamet), a young, brooding twentysomething straggler with an apparent moral code, and a semblance of remaining connection to his family (a rarity for eaters). He’s gaunt and awkward, with the kind of quiet disposition a teen like Maren might find mysterious, but there’s something obviously despondent about him too — between this and Call Me By Your Name, Guadagnino has perfected the art of using Chalamet to create Sadboi cinema — and the characters’ personal dynamic offers the movie a sense of novel calm, at least for a moment. Fittingly, a key scene for Lee and Maren’s understanding of other eaters (and of themselves) takes the form of a revelatory fireside chat with a character played by Michael Stuhlbarg. However, it’s the emotional antonym of its equivalent in Call Me By Your Name, creating tension and unease rather than comfort.

As Maren and Lee make their way across the U.S., Guadagnino and cinematographer Arseni Khachaturan paint each location with a tangible texture, using celluloid to capture both atmospheric warmth and emotional mystery in the air. They even play tricks with exposure for handfuls of frames, during moments where vivid memories briefly invade the characters’ consciousness, as if to root their troubling thoughts in physical sensations, burned onto the film. All the while, composers Trent Reznor and Atticus Ross play with mischievous, haunting tones, with each stretched, individual guitar note practically anticipating the next one, as if it were reaching out through the lonely silences between them — until that silence becomes filled with an ethereal melody. It’s the sound of falling in love, but it’s ever so mournful too, as if Maren and Lee’s romance isn’t long for this world for one reason or another.

Guadagnino wields sorrow not as an affect, but as a fabric, one that ripples with the weight of the past.

Some of the movie’s zigs and zags may not feel entirely in tune with its listlessness — one late turn in particular, while shockingly visceral, works to make its silent, lingering horrors a bit too overt — but there are rarely moments when Bones and All doesn’t feel engrossing. Guadagnino wields sorrow not as an affect, but as a fabric, one that ripples with the weight of the past even before it’s fully rediscovered, resulting in a film where love feels as much like a burden as it does liberation.

Verdict

A lush, richly conceived cannibal road-trip romance, Luca Guadagnino’s Bones and All lives in the intimate space between love and self-hatred, with characters who connect over their shared hunger for human flesh. Everything from its performances to its music feels fine-tuned to tell a story about reaching out through the void, no matter what reaches or bites back.

Bones and All Review - IGN (2024)

FAQs

How disturbing is Bones and All? ›

Violence & Scariness

Extremely bloody violence: on-screen murder by bludgeoning and stabbing; scenes of people biting and eating bloody parts of a dead body (stringy goop comes out, along with pooling, dripping, and spouting blood and lumps of tissue).

What is the message behind Bones and All? ›

“It's a dark fable—it's a fable about overcoming your limits and your nature, and finding love.” The way Bones and All focuses on the romantic elements of this forbidden love affair isn't too different from its source material.

Is Bones and All too graphic? ›

Rated R for strong, bloody and disturbing violent content, language throughout, some sexual content and brief graphic nudity.

Is Bones and All worth it? ›

A road movie with a believable romance, disgusting horror, gorgeous visuals and impeccable score, Bones and All, a movie that shouldn't work, becomes one of the best of the year.

Was Bones and All a flop? ›

The film received positive reviews, with critics praising the performances of Russell, Chalamet and Rylance, Guadagnino's direction, the cinematography, score, and fusion of genres. However, it underperformed at the box office, grossing $15.2 million against a production budget of $16–20 million.

Is Bones and All queer? ›

“Bones and All” depicts queerness through the lens of cannibalism as it's framing, while also maintaining, a straight romance. It does this in order to negate the false narrative of queer love as wrong. The fictional cannibals aren't wrong for being cannibals, queer individuals are not wrong for being queer.

Why does Maren eat people in Bones and All? ›

Throughout the novel, Maren consumes several boys and young men who express interest in her, suggesting that her cannibalism is closely tied to her own romantic and sexual desires, even though it also prevents her from intimacy with others.

Why did Lee ask Maren to eat him? ›

The narrative climax of the novel is Lee's decision to embrace Maren sexually, after which she eats him. Lee, she believes, consented to being eaten as a characteristically morbid expression of his love for her. Through his apparent sacrifice, he pushes Maren to accept herself just as he has accepted her.

What is cannibalism a metaphor for in Bones and All? ›

Through Guadagnino's attentive work, cannibalism becomes a metaphor for closeted queerness: a way of dramatizing both the consummate longing and consonant shame of wanting something you shouldn't.

Is Bones and All based on cannibalism? ›

The point is that some people did make quite a lot of money in the '80s. No one I knew did growing up." The writer also resolved to explicitly depict the acts of cannibalism in the film, moments which DeAngelis describes with comparative obliqueness in her original novel.

Is Lee alive at the end of Bones and All? ›

The ending in the Bones And All book is different, but not that much. Lee dies in both the book and the movie adaptation. And Maren eats him in both cases. In the book, Maren eats Lee against his will. In the movie, Lee is hurt when he and Maren kill Sully.

Why would anyone watch Bones and All? ›

Although its subject matter may be hard to stomach, Bones and All proves a deeply romantic and thought-provoking treat. Depending on whether you've got the palate for this extremely unusual love story, Bones and All is either a farm-to-table treat or a revolting waste of time.

Are there any inappropriate scenes in Bones and All? ›

The MPAA rating has been assigned for “strong, bloody and disturbing violent content, language throughout, some sexual content and brief graphic nudity.” The Kids-In-Mind.com evaluation includes full female nudity including genitals on p*rnographic posters, an implied scene of a man masturbating another man, several ...

Is Bones and All sad ending? ›

While it's definitely still a depressing ending, there's always the possibility that Maren will find Kayla and tell her about her brother's legacy.

What is the meaning of Bones and All? ›

This means that in the romantic context, eating someone "bones and all" could refer to sharing love with someone where both involved accept each other completely for who they are, just like Maren and Lee.

Is there any inappropriate scenes in Bones and All? ›

The MPAA rating has been assigned for “strong, bloody and disturbing violent content, language throughout, some sexual content and brief graphic nudity.” The Kids-In-Mind.com evaluation includes full female nudity including genitals on p*rnographic posters, an implied scene of a man masturbating another man, several ...

Are there any jumpscares in Bones and All? ›

there are a couple of jumpscares (2 i can think of) and some graphic nudity (breasts are shown multiple times and posters in a minor characters bedroom have p*rnographic imagery).

What age are Bones and All appropriate for? ›

Is Bones appropriate for 13 year olds? ›

Entertaining but GORY (and other serious thematic content)

I'm 20 but if I had kids younger than 15 or 16 I WOULD NOT let them watch this. It's really mostly about the gory/vivid crime scenes. Blood, decay... bones ect.

Top Articles
Latest Posts
Article information

Author: Rubie Ullrich

Last Updated:

Views: 5538

Rating: 4.1 / 5 (52 voted)

Reviews: 83% of readers found this page helpful

Author information

Name: Rubie Ullrich

Birthday: 1998-02-02

Address: 743 Stoltenberg Center, Genovevaville, NJ 59925-3119

Phone: +2202978377583

Job: Administration Engineer

Hobby: Surfing, Sailing, Listening to music, Web surfing, Kitesurfing, Geocaching, Backpacking

Introduction: My name is Rubie Ullrich, I am a enthusiastic, perfect, tender, vivacious, talented, famous, delightful person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.