π¬ The Lobster (2015) β Movie Review
Starring: Colin Farrell, Rachel Weisz, LΓ©a Seydoux
Genre: Absurdist Drama, Dark Comedy, Dystopian Romance
In a world where love is mandatory and solitude is punishable, The Lobster (2015) stands as one of the most delightfully bizarre cinematic experiences of the decade.
Colin Farrell stars as David, a recently single man forced into a dystopian hotel where the rules are simple and terrifying: find a romantic partner within 45 days, or be transformed into an animal of your choosing. David, with tragic sincerity, chooses a lobster.
What follows is not just a critique of societyβs obsession with coupling, but a haunting, hilarious, and unsettling exploration of identity, conformity, and rebellion. The tone is cold yet humorous, absurd yet eerily familiar. Rachel Weisz joins the narrative midway, delivering a beautifully quiet performance as a fellow fugitive from love’s authoritarian system.
Director Yorgos Lanthimos crafts a surreal universe where emotions are suppressed, logic is twisted, and romance is transactional. The characters speak in dry, robotic monotonesβheightening the absurdity and forcing viewers to confront the artifice of social expectations.
The cinematography is stark and clinical, reflecting the emotional sterility of the world. Yet hidden beneath the bleakness is a strangely moving story of love found not in compatibility, but in shared defiance.
The Lobster is not for everyone. But for those drawn to the strange and philosophical, itβs a sharp, darkly funny critique of modern relationships dressed in absurdity and wrapped in existential dread.