Hurry Up Tomorrow (United States, 2025)
May 18, 2025
I guess this is what narcissism looks like. Or at least a
vanity project run amok. It’s a pity because I enjoyed director Trey Edward Shults’
2017 horror movie, It Comes at Night. But this isn’t really about Shults;
it’s about The Weeknd. Or, more appropriately, it’s about The Weeknd’s ego.
Part music video, part bizarro psychological thriller, and part David Lynch-inspired
descent into existential purgatory (I kept looking for Michael J. Anderson), the
film’s weirdness is sometimes extreme enough to exert an almost hypnotic
attraction. But, as good as he may be on stage and in a music studio, The Weeknd
(a.k.a. Abel Tesfaye) is not a good actor. His face is too often a blank mask
and he delivers dialogue like he’s reading off a cue card. So, when the camera
focuses on him, which it does with depressing frequency, there’s nothing anyone
else can do to save the moment.
Jenna Ortega is one of the movie’s few saving graces. Her earnest performance as Anima is suitably off-kilter. She gets to dance (seemingly now a prerequisite for any post-Wednesday Ortega movie) but there’s something jarring about seeing her acting in a scene with Tesfaye because of the disparity in acting talent. And her role is woefully underwritten. We get shades of Kathy Bates in Misery and Julian Sands in Boxing Helena but the reality of who she is, other than a lonely superfan with arsonist tendencies and a mother who screams at her over her phone, is never investigated.
Tesfaye is playing a fictionalized version of himself. The movie
presents him as a huge star who has become disillusioned with both his life and
his art. He does drugs with his manager, Lee (Barry Keoghan), but, after losing
his voice during a performance, he pulls a disappearing act. This brings him
into contact with Anima, a fan he meets backstage. The two spend the night
wandering around and getting to know one another (do not mistake this for Before Sunrise). With Lee desperately trying to find his meal ticket, Tesfaye
brings Anima to a hotel room where they compare notes about loneliness and
apparently sleep together. By the cold light of morning (afternoon, actually),
things look very different. Realizing she is just another groupie to be
discarded, Anima takes decisive and violent action.
There are a lot of missteps in Hurry Up Tomorrow. The music video-influenced first act runs for too long, too little time is spent on the scenes where The Weeknd and Anima get to know one another, and the Lynch-lite stuff (in addition to being pointless) drags on forever. Hurry Up, indeed! The best stuff focuses on Ortega – Anima’s dance moves to “Blinding Lights” and “Gasoline” (after which she explains the meaning of the lyrics to the guy who wrote them) and her spirited clash with Lee. Oh, and if Ortega’s role is underwritten, that goes double for Barry Keoghan’s.
I can’t help but wonder if there might have been a fun
B-movie thriller to be found somewhere deep in Hurry Up Tomorrow’s DNA –
a kind-of Fatal Attraction-influenced story. But that would have
required a less pretentious approach (everyone involved seems to believe they
are making art) and a more seasoned lead actor. There’s also a lingering
question about whether this movie was ever intended to be seen by audiences
unfamiliar with The Weeknd’s discography or whether it’s a 105-minute marketing
ploy for the companion album.
Whatever the case, Hurry Up Tomorrow seems destined for one of two fates: to be buried in the landfill of self-indulgent, ill-advised vanity projects or find a second life as a cult classic. Until it reaches either of those eventual destinations, however, the best approach is to ignore the movie – let the album stand on its own without this awkward and unwieldy appendage.
Hurry Up Tomorrow (United States, 2025)
Cast: Abel Tesfaye, Jenna Ortega, Barry Keoghan
Screenplay: Reza Fahim, Trey Edward Shults, Abel Tesfaye
Cinematography: Chayse Irvin
Music: The Weeknd, Daniel Lopatin
U.S. Distributor: Lionsgate
U.S. Release Date: 2025-05-16
MPAA Rating: "R" (Profanity, Violence, Drugs)
Genre: Thriller
Subtitles: none
Theatrical Aspect Ratio: 2.35:1
- (There are no more better movies of Abel Tesfaye)
- (There are no more worst movies of Abel Tesfaye)
- Scream (2022)
- Scream VI (2023)
- (There are no more worst movies of Jenna Ortega)
- Eternals (2021)
- (There are no more worst movies of Barry Keoghan)
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