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Exclusive: Acclaimed Director Yorgos Lanthimos Takes Shocking Hiatus After 'Bugonia' Release

Published 2 days ago3 minute read
Precious Eseaye
Precious Eseaye
Exclusive: Acclaimed Director Yorgos Lanthimos Takes Shocking Hiatus After 'Bugonia' Release

The ever-inventive filmmaker Yorgos Lanthimos is stepping away from the director’s chair — at least for a while. With the upcoming release of his highly anticipated film Bugonia, an adaptation of Jang Joon-hwan’s 2003 cult classicSave the Green Planet!, the acclaimed Greek auteur has announced a surprising creative hiatus after an intensely productive stretch of back-to-back films.

In a candid conversation with Collider’s Steve Weintraub, Lanthimos revealed he “can’t keep doing that anymore,” referring to his breakneck pace of completing three major projects in as many years, Poor Things, Kinds of Kindness, and now Bugonia. The filmmaker, whose body of work includes The Favourite and The Killing of a Sacred Deer, suggested that Bugonia may mark his final directorial effort “for some time.”

Inside Bugonia: A Bold Sci-Fi Adaptation

Featuring his long-time collaborator Emma Stone, who won an Oscar for her performance in Poor Things, Bugonia also stars Jesse Plemons and newcomer Aidan Delbis. The film follows Teddy (Plemons), a conspiracy theorist, and his cousin Don (Delbis), as they kidnap tech mogul Michelle (Stone), believing she’s part of an alien plot to destroy Earth. The surreal premise is classic Lanthimos, darkly comic, morally ambiguous, and visually mesmerizing.

Lanthimos explained that the film’s production overlapped with the visual effects work on Poor Things, a schedule that pushed him to exhaustion. “When a script is ready, I can’t resist going after it,” he said, noting that this compulsion to keep creating had begun to take a personal toll. “I’ve reached a point where I need to pause and recharge.”

The Writer’s Perspective

Bugonia screenwriter Will Tracy, known for The Menu and as a former Editor-in-Chief at The Onion, reflected on his own evolution as a storyteller. After working on Last Week Tonight with John Oliver, Tracy realized his true calling lay in fiction, saying his time in late-night comedy “felt like doing geometry homework every week.”

A Technical Triumph

One of Bugonia’s most distinctive choices was shooting in VistaVision, a widescreen film format seldom used in contemporary cinema. Lanthimos and cinematographer Robbie Ryan used the Wilcam 11 camera, prized for its relative quietness, allowing intimate dialogue scenes without intrusive mechanical noise. Though massive in size, the camera’s large format gave Bugonia a grand visual contrast trapping characters in tight spaces while evoking cosmic scale.

Lanthimos has urged audiences to experience Bugonia in theaters, emphasizing that the widescreen imagery was designed for the cinematic experience.

The Soundtrack: From Chappell Roan to Green Day

Adding to the film’s idiosyncratic flair, Emma Stone personally suggested a Chappell Roan song for her character Michelle, a choice that ultimately shaped the emotional tone of one of the film’s pivotal moments. In a last-minute editorial change, a Green Day track was added to a humorous scene involving Teddy’s attempt to gauge Michelle’s “alien royalty level,” replacing an earlier piece that no longer fit the film’s shifting mood.

A Pause Before the Next Chapter

As Bugonia begins its limited theatrical run before its October 31 nationwide release, Lanthimos’s fans are both excited and wistful. His announcement underscores the emotional and creative strain behind his extraordinary output. Yet, given the director’s history of reinvention, this hiatus feels less like an end and more like the calm before another cinematic storm.

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