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Hedda Poster

Hedda

A little chaos is good for the gathering.
2025 | 107m | English

(55 votes)

TMDb IMDb

Popularity: 10 (history)

Director: Nia DaCosta
Writer: Nia DaCosta
Staring:
Details

Hedda Gabler finds herself torn between the lingering ache of a past love and the quiet suffocation of her present life. Over the course of one charged night, long-repressed desires and hidden tensions erupt—pulling her and everyone around her into a spiral of manipulation, passion, and betrayal.
Release Date: Oct 22, 2025
Director: Nia DaCosta
Writer: Nia DaCosta
Genres: Drama, Romance, Thriller
Keywords suicide, coercion, based on play or musical, tragedy, newlywed, 19th century
Production Companies Plan B Entertainment, Viva Maude, Orion Pictures
Box Office Revenue: $8,393
Budget: $0
Updates Updated: Nov 23, 2025
Entered: Nov 23, 2025
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Full Credits

Name Character
Tessa Thompson Hedda Gabler
Nina Hoss Eileen Lovborg
Imogen Poots Thea Clifton
Nicholas Pinnock Judge Roland Brack
Tom Bateman George Tesman
Finbar Lynch Professor Greenwood
Mirren Mack Tabitha Greenwood
Jamael Westman David
Saffron Hocking Jane Ji
Kathryn Hunter Bertie
Michelle Crane Joan
Sam Hoare Detective Logan
Stacey Gough Detective Smith
Mark Oosterveen Professor Dunbar
Jack Barry Professor John Henry James
Sonya Orlov Mrs. Dunbar
Nicholas Bishop Professor Thompson
Milly Paris Mrs. Thompson
Jack Sherlock Jono
Mark de Freitas Gardener (uncredited)
Simon Neil Hutchinson Scholar 2 Colleague of George Tesman (uncredited)
Nahna James (uncredited)
Sophie Oliver Sanchez Band Singer (uncredited)
Sophie Reed Drummer (uncredited)
Name Job
Lindsay Pugh Costume Design
Varpu Kronholm Stunt Double, Stunts
Nia DaCosta Writer, Director
Oliver Ferris Foley Artist
Alesha Ledeatte-Williams Makeup Artist
Julio Parodi Hairstylist
James Bishop ADR Recordist
Luke Gentry Sound Designer
Declan Ilett Sound Re-Recording Mixer
Andrew Stirk Sound Re-Recording Mixer
Danny Hargreaves Special Effects Technician
Helen McAvoy-James Visual Effects Producer
Sean Bobbitt Director of Photography
Andrew Ackland-Snow Art Direction
Jo Harris Casting
Sharon Martin Hair Designer, Makeup Designer
Joy Hoes Second Assistant Director
Stefano Carnera Sound Re-Recording Mixer
Sue Harding Foley Artist
Steve Little Supervising Sound Editor
Daniel Bentley Special Effects Technician
Ben Morris Special Effects Technician
Gordon Alexander Stunts
Jude Poyer Stunt Coordinator
Chris G.R. Webb Stunts
Jacob Secher Schulsinger Editor
Francesco Alberico Key Hair Stylist
Niamh O'Loan Key Makeup Artist
Shelley Maxwell Choreographer
Simon Diggins ADR Mixer
James Hyde ADR Mixer
Matt Robinson ADR Mixer
Dewi Alun Foulkes Special Effects Technician
Dean Koonjul Visual Effects Supervisor
Renato Gjini Stunts
Laurent Plancel Stunts
Jaz Schodel Stunts
Matt Curtis Title Designer
Henrik Ibsen Theatre Play
Cara Brower Production Design
Des Hamilton Casting
Alesha Ledeatte-Williams Hairstylist
William Dodds First Assistant Director
Scott Cannizzaro ADR Mixer
Wong Hui Grace Dialogue Editor
Xena Kirby Foley Editor
Mike Tehrani ADR Mixer
Will Hougham Special Effects Technician
Daphne Tychogiorgou Visual Effects Editor
Rikki Harris Stunts
Rubie Planson Stunts
Shiraz Yasin Stunts
Hildur Guðnadóttir Original Music Composer
Stella Fox Set Decoration
Jordan McInnes Second Second Assistant Director
Rob Davidson Foley Editor
Chris Howard Sound Effects Editor
Ben Meechan Supervising Sound Editor
Ollie Darwin Special Effects Technician
Faye Robinson Special Effects Coordinator
Tom Crowley Ellis Stunts
Alan Leong Stunts
Bianca Rennie Stunts
Martin Cox Gaffer
Name Title
Michael S. Constable Executive Producer
Gabrielle Nadig Producer
Jeremy Kleiner Producer
Claire Lamarra Associate Producer
Kishori Rajan Executive Producer
Brad Pitt Executive Producer
Nia DaCosta Producer
Sophie Sengchan Associate Producer
Tessa Thompson Producer
Dede Gardner Producer
Organization Category Person
Popularity Metrics

Popularity History


Year Month Avg Max Min
2024 4 3 7 1
2024 5 5 12 2
2024 6 2 7 0
2024 7 2 4 0
2024 8 2 5 1
2024 9 1 3 1
2024 10 1 3 1
2024 11 1 3 1
2024 12 1 1 1
2025 1 1 4 1
2025 2 1 1 1
2025 3 1 2 1
2025 4 1 1 1
2025 5 1 1 1
2025 6 1 1 1
2025 7 0 0 0
2025 8 1 2 0
2025 9 2 2 1
2025 10 6 75 2
2025 11 33 97 10

Trending Position


Year Month High Avg
2025 11 891 942

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Reviews

EmilyTX
1.0

**Awful acting** I am sorry but tessa thompson is a terrible lead actress. I saw her try to act in this movie as well as West World and she needs to find a new day job. My husband actually started laughing out loud at one of her "serious" scenes. Movie was pretty crummy anyway, I don't think a di ... fferent lead actress would have saved it.

Nov 08, 2025
TriceratopsAU
1.0

I don't understand how the lead actress in this keeps getting parts? She's a terrible actress, it's like she is sitting at a table read and just reading her lines aloud. She has absolutely zero charisma and is is definitely not attractive, nor even cute. I guess Hollywood continues to cast people li ... ke her for **some reason**.

Oct 31, 2025
Brent_Marchant
6.0

Reinterpreting a classic work of art – no matter what medium it might initially be grounded in – can be a tricky task. This is true when jumping from one milieu to another, such as stage to screen, as well when altering the nature or elements of the work, such as its setting, time frame and characte ... rs. And, if more than one of these qualities undergoes transformation simultaneously, the metamorphosis can become considerably challenging, if not problematic. Such is the task undertaken by writer-director Nia DaCosta in this reimagining of the time-honored stage play Hedda Gabler by Norwegian playwright Henrik Ibsen. When Ibsen penned this work in 1890, it represented a continuation of his examination of strong-willed women, an undertaking that some contend ironically made him a pioneer of feminist thinking. That initiative began with A Doll’s House in 1879, a play in which he chronicled the life of a subservient wife and mother who courageously rose up to challenge her controlling husband. In Gabler, however, Ibsen wrote about a darker figure, an ambitious, manipulative trophy wife who sought a life of wealth and comfort and willfully did whatever it took to achieve it, no matter how questionable or menacing. In this current adaptation, the filmmaker advances themes launched in Ibsen’s original production but with some adjustments to make it more contemporary – and more sinister. For starters, this version is set in the 1950s rather than the late 19th Century, complete with technology, musical styles and other aspects of everyday life that weren’t in existence in Ibsen’s time. Hedda (Tessa Thompson) has changed somewhat, too; she’s still the insincere, conniving schemer she was in the original, though she’s now Black, bisexual and more compellingly driven than ever. As before, she’s married to an adoring but somewhat dull, overly cerebral university academic, George (Tom Bateman), who’s bucking for a professorship that will compensate him handsomely, enabling him to dotingly support his beloved in the lap of luxury she craves, an effort she doesn’t always appreciate. However, George’s hopes for being promoted aren’t guaranteed given the challenge posed by a rival peer, Eileen (Nina Hoss), who recently wrote a successful, high-profile best seller – and who also just happens to be Hedda’s former romantic interest. These story threads all come together at a lavish soiree hosted by George and Hedda to help bolster his chances for promotion. And the evening initially seems to proceed well until Eileen makes an appearance, along with her literary collaborator and fawning would-be lover, Thea (Imogen Poots), a certified milquetoast who just happens to be a childhood friend of Hedda. As the party unfolds, Hedda deftly spins her little schemes to turn events to her favor but with consequences that turn out to be even more unexpected than she had anticipated. This web of intrigue is set against an uninhibited backdrop that echoes the unbridled celebratory self-indulgence seen in movies like “The Great Gatsby” (2013) and “Babylon,” with dashes of “Eyes Wide Shut” (1999) thrown in for erotic good measure. In many ways, though, the narrative largely plays like a catty, vengeful, quasi-campy 1980s prime time soap (albeit one that, fortunately, manages to improve as it progresses into its later chapters). However, despite the film’s efforts to convey a meaningful message about the virtues of pursuing what truly matters most in life, the story nevertheless becomes bogged down by deplorable characters who possess few, if any, redeeming qualities. In addition, most of the filmmaker’s tweaks from Ibsen’s original may be provocative in nature but are ultimately mostly cosmetic in terms of their contributions. Perhaps the most significant saving grace here are the performances, particularly among supporting cast members like Hoss and Poots. As for Thompson, though, as valiantly as she tries to capture the essence of one of the most demanding female roles in all of acting, she doesn’t quite give Hedda the due that her character calls for, making it often appear as though the actress is struggling to tackle a portrayal that’s still beyond her grasp. And that sentiment, for what it’s worth, sums up how I see this offering overall – a commendable attempt at imbuing a true classic with a new vision on, one definitely worthy of applause but not the acclaim it so earnestly seems to seek.

Nov 20, 2025