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A Different Man Poster

A Different Man

The more you change, the more you stay the same.
2024 | 112m | English

(33891 votes)

TMDb IMDb

Popularity: 2 (history)

Director: Aaron Schimberg
Writer: Aaron Schimberg
Staring:
Details

Aspiring actor Edward undergoes a radical medical procedure to drastically transform his appearance. But his new dream face quickly turns into a nightmare, as he loses out on the role he was born to play and becomes obsessed with reclaiming what was lost.
Release Date: Aug 24, 2024
Director: Aaron Schimberg
Writer: Aaron Schimberg
Genres: Comedy, Drama
Keywords new york city, transformation, pity, identity, dark comedy, playwright, self hatred, aspiring actor, body horror
Production Companies Killer Films, A24, Grand Motel Films
Box Office Revenue: $1,169,365
Budget: $0
Updates Updated: May 20, 2025 (Update)
Entered: Apr 13, 2024
Trailers and Extras

International Posters

Full Credits

Name Character
Sebastian Stan Edward
Renate Reinsve Ingrid
Adam Pearson Oswald
Miles G. Jackson Sean
Patrick Wang Director
Neal Davidson Corey
Jed Rapfogel Man in Sunglasses
Marc Geller Ragged Man
James Foster, Jr. Intrusive Man
JJ McGlone Casting Director
Sergio Delavicci Mover
Lawrence Arancio Landlord
Billy Griffith Ollie
John Klacsmann Ostermeier
Cosmo Bjorkenheim Whistling Expert
John Keating Dr. Varno
C. Mason Wells Carl
Corey Taylor Luther
Danielle Burgos Sally
Sammy Mena Sammy Silverheels
Jon Dieringer Johnny Handsome
Malachi Weir Dr. Flexner
David Joseph Regelmann Dr. Jewell
Nina White Dr. Trutz
Dena Winter Ostermeier’s Girl
Peter D. Straus Abraham Lincoln
Cameron Steinfeld Grinning Man
Marley Ficalora Athletic Man
Cornelius Horgan Bartender
Doug Barron Guy Gaunt
Stephee Bonifacio Heather
Allan Anthony Smith Rowdy Man
Trenton Hudson Rowdy Man
Sean Berman Goth Guy
Annelise Ogaard Goth Girl
Juney Smith Nestor
Lucy Kaminsky Mariana
Owen Kline Nick
Jarvis Tomdio Clay
Ethan Lusk Boy on Subway
Karoline Vivian
Liana Runcie Fiona
Bruce Kitzmeyer Mr. Sablosky
Martin Ewens Makeup Artist
Caroline Golum Karaoke Singer
Eleanore Pienta Sadie
Hanna Edizel Laughing Girl
Charlie Korsmo Ron Belcher
Michael Shannon Michael Shannon
Christopher Spurrier Physical Therapist
Katie Takahashi Server
Vanessa McDonnell PSA Narrator
Rory McGuire PSA Face
Alison Midstokke PSA Face
John Hewson PSA Face
Chrissie Riedhofer PSA Face
Mikaela Moody PSA Face
Emma Easton PSA Face
Aaron Schimberg Man in Bar (uncredited)
Name Job
Aaron Schimberg Writer, Director
Blaise Corrigan Stunts
Aaron Saucier Hair Department Head
Seth Andrew Bridges Stunt Coordinator
Travis Staton-Marrero Stunt Coordinator
Kate Branom First Assistant Director
Cameron Steinfeld Second Second Assistant Director
Achille Vanderhaeghen Second Assistant Director
Coco Cashman Art Department Coordinator
Clove Hacken Set Dresser
Wesley Grant Boom Operator
Eugene Hitt Special Effects Supervisor, Special Effects Coordinator
Vesselin Todorov-Vinnie Stunt Double
Arjun Bajaj First Assistant "B" Camera
Colby Blackwill Electrician
Esha Kallianpur Script Supervisor
Giovanni Ferrari Location Manager
Wyatt Garfield Director of Photography
Fiona Mitchell Set Decoration
Taylor Levy Editor
Bart Keller First Assistant Director, First Assistant Editor
Emilia Spirito Art Direction
Umberto Smerilli Original Music Composer
Yajing Wu Script Supervisor
Piernicola Di Muro Music Producer
Maribeth Fox Casting
Merideth Ivy Key Hair Stylist
Jasmin Osean Thomas Second Second Assistant Director
Matt Infante Still Photographer
Matt Rigby Dialogue Editor
Nina Bellord Hairstylist
Anna Kathleen Production Design
Alexandre Bandola Foley Artist
Neil Benezra Sound Designer, Supervising Sound Editor, Sound Re-Recording Mixer
Lúcia Carvalho Foley Artist
David Forshee Sound Designer, Sound Re-Recording Mixer
Carolina Néu Foley Artist
Jerrell Suelto ADR Mixer
Deborah Brozina Camera Operator
John David Devirgiliis Camera Operator
Olivia Kimmel First Assistant Camera
Aubree Burns Second Assistant Camera
Kim Ostroy Casting Associate
Betsy Waddell Wardrobe Supervisor
Jason Reif Line Producer
Alexander Brou Key Grip
Julia Crytser Loader
Benjamin Tuttle Title Designer
Stacey Berman Costume Design
Mike Marino Makeup Designer
Annie Pearlman Music Supervisor
Daniel Goldhaber Thanks
Nat Jencks Colorist
Maria Rusche "B" Camera Operator
Dennis Rainaldi Production Sound Mixer
Omkar Gauchan Dolly Grip
Lyon Taylor Chief Lighting Technician
Jonathan Lau Utility Sound
Alvin Jowers Utility Sound
Christine Morris Property Master
Denae Marshall Hairstylist
Judy Lawrence Hairstylist
Sarah Graalman Makeup Department Head
Melanie Licata Key Makeup Artist
Alina Barreto Makeup Artist
Chelsea Paige Makeup Artist
Kristen Kiyan Makeup Artist
Edward Drohan Special Effects Technician
Isaac Derfel Sound Effects Editor
Paul Vitolins Sound Effects Editor
Mark Szumski Visual Effects Supervisor
Viveka Garza-Gomez Visual Effects Producer
Dragisa Stojanov Sound Engineer
Melissa Chapman Music Supervisor
João Galvão Foley Mixer
Josephine Decker Thanks
Izzi Galindo Prosthetic Makeup Artist
David Presto Prosthetic Makeup Artist
Crystal Jurado Prosthetic Makeup Artist
Dayna Schutz First Assistant Director
Name Title
Christine Vachon Producer
Pamela Koffler Co-Producer
Aaron Schimberg Executive Producer
Vanessa McDonnell Producer
Gabriel Mayers Producer
Sebastian Stan Executive Producer
Organization Category Person
Popularity Metrics

Popularity History


Year Month Avg Max Min
2024 4 7 12 4
2024 5 8 11 6
2024 6 10 22 5
2024 7 18 29 7
2024 8 12 21 9
2024 9 32 52 11
2024 10 20 32 14
2024 11 108 237 16
2024 12 65 103 42
2025 1 84 140 59
2025 2 50 76 9
2025 3 19 67 3
2025 4 6 9 5
2025 5 6 10 3
2025 6 6 9 4
2025 7 4 5 2
2025 8 2 3 2
2025 9 2 3 2

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2025 8 554 767
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2025 6 270 643
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2025 5 37 348
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2025 4 415 717
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2025 3 116 517
Year Month High Avg
2025 2 88 354
Year Month High Avg
2025 1 23 141
Year Month High Avg
2024 12 69 333
Year Month High Avg
2024 11 1 243
Year Month High Avg
2024 10 182 529
Year Month High Avg
2024 9 139 388

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Reviews

Geronimo1967
7.0

"Edward" (Sebastian Stan) is a facially disfigured man, stuck in a rundown apartment, whose life isn't really going anywhere fast. Then he gets a new neighbour. "Ingrid" (Renato Reinsve) is a writer who befriends him and promises him a part in her play. Meantime, his doctors manage to get him on a r ... adical course of treatment that gradually returns his face to a more normal visage. Returning to his flat, and with some fairly grotesque things emerging from his leaky ceiling, he realises that nobody recognises him anymore so he has to assume a different identity. That's when he discovers that "Ingrid" is, indeed, putting on a play - and that the old "Edward" is the title and the topic. He wants the part. It's his part. How to get it though without giving the game away? Add to his frustrations the arrival of "Oswald" (Adam Pearson) who is an ostensibly decent character but who also wants the role, and he has the aesthetics as opposed to the prosthetics. "Ingrid" has tough choices to make but where might this leave "Edward"? There's something quite circular about the way this story pans out. A sort of be careful what you wish for type scenario that gives and removes hope from "Edward" and almost creates a villain of the piece too! Is that merited or is that justified? The drama shines a light on the more shallow attitudes amidst society, on our intolerances and assumptions but it also swipes at the fickleness of friendships, fame and success - all rather engagingly delivered by both Stan and Pearson. It's the former man who positively exudes exasperation as the denouement (only vaguely) skirts the Chaplinesque. It's on that note that it's worth saying this is quite funny at times, too - the writing doesn't try to impose any morals on us, rather it presents us with some scenarios and lets us enjoy and evaluate as we go. It doesn't hang about, and right from the start we hit the ground running as the characters develop, the personalities emerge - for good or bad, and it's well worth a couple of hours in a cinema. I got more from it second time round as I was able to focus a little more on the nuance than the imagery.

Oct 06, 2024
good.film
N/A

_A Different Man_ delights with a delicious paradox: take a character who feels outcast because of his looks, and then – _voila_. Melt away his differences. _Would he suddenly fit in? Would his life instantly turn around? Or is “success” far more than skin deep?_ New York writer-director Aaron Sc ... himberg wants us to ponder if Edward is better off than he was before. We're caught between wondering if he's a victim of society’s need for normalcy – or a victim of _his own_ victim complex. With his third feature, Schimberg creates a tantalising fantasy with oodles to say about perception, identity and inner happiness. His dark comic story peers deep into how we deal with “otherness” in society – and how we often revert, in our private moments, to letting our exteriors define who we are inside. The cherry on top? The scene when Edward’s tumours start loosening, and he literally begins peeling his face off in stringy strips. Whether real or imagined, it’s up there with cinema’s most memorably horrifying special FX. Read our full review of _A Different Man_ at good.film: https://good.film/guide/a-different-man-literally-strips-away-how-we-look-at-disfigurement

Oct 30, 2024
Brent_Marchant
5.0

Stories that allegorically address themes related to self-esteem, social acceptance and prejudice undoubtedly merit our attention, provided that they execute their narratives in discernable, cogent, relatable ways. Unfortunately, though, that’s where writer-director Aaron Schimberg’s third feature d ... rops the ball. The film follows the strange saga of Edward Lemuel (Sebastian Stan), an aspiring New York actor afflicted with a severe skin disfigurement that has left his face overcome with tumorous growths. However, when he learns of a radical new medical treatment that offers the hope of a cure, he jumps at the chance. And, before long, after a series of incidents that bring graphic new meaning to the term “skin peel,” he’s left with a normal (and quite handsome) appearance. But, now that he has this new look, is it what he really wants for himself? Can he adjust to it and what it affords? This change thus prompts him to ask himself these questions when he starts getting all of the things he had once supposedly longed for, such as a beautiful romantic interest, Ingrid (Renate Reinsve), and a lead role in an off-Broadway play. He can’t help but quietly wonder, “Am I suddenly being accepted because of my appearance or because of who I am as an individual?” What’s more, was the reaction that he previously received from others as bad as he thought it was, or was his perception clouded by his own distorted views of himself? That becomes especially true when he meets Oswald (Adam Pearson), a cheery, well-adjusted individual who leads a successful, fulfilling life despite being affected by the same health condition Edward once had. Conceptually speaking, these issues are universal themes that many of us might ask ourselves from time to time, all of which ultimately stem back to our view of whether we see the glass of life being half full or half empty. However, when examined through this prism, these ideas are unnecessarily muddled here by a clumsy script that can’t make up its mind what kind of movie it wants to be. Is it smart horror? A dark comedy? A psychological thriller? As it’s presented, the film is a jumbled combination of the foregoing punctuated by awkward and abrupt transitions, undercooked character development, and underwhelming explorations of its core notions. Indeed, rather than confidently tackling its primary intents head on, the picture spends much of its time dancing around them (and often tripping over its own feet in the process), particularly with the incorporation of odd, out-of-place plot elements that serve more to confuse the flow of the story than to clarify it. In many ways, the finished product becomes much like the quirky, bombastic works of filmmakers Charlie Kaufman, Ari Aster or Darren Aronofsky, one that leans more toward the needless excesses of “The Substance” (2024) than the graceful eloquence of “The Elephant Man” (1980). To its credit, “A Different Man” frequently comes across better than it probably should thanks to the solid performances of Pearson, Reinsve and Golden Globe Award winner Stan. But, given the film’s many other shortcomings, that’s hardly enough to save this production from itself.

Jan 07, 2025