Beau Is | Afraid

The film argues that the most fundamental horror is not death, but disappointment . Beau’s every action is paralyzed by the imagined voice of his mother. He cannot have sex without guilt (witness the terrifyingly awkward scene with a grieving mother in the city). He cannot travel without sabotage. He cannot even die without first confessing his inadequacy.

The film follows Beau Wassermann (Joaquin Phoenix), a middle-aged man whose life is a continuous, low-grade panic attack. He lives in a nightmare version of a gentrifying city, where the streets are populated by naked stabbers, tattooed maniacs, and a pervasive, lawless chaos. He is on his way to visit his formidable mother, Mona (Patti LuPone), but his journey is a cascade of Freudian catastrophes: keys stolen, luggage lost, a violent encounter with a deranged war veteran, and being run over by his own anxiety medication. Aster structures the film not as a linear narrative but as a theatrical odyssey through psychic states. Beau Is Afraid

is the film’s surreal, beautiful, and controversial heart. A traveling theater troupe stages a hand-drawn animated interlude depicting Beau’s ideal life. In this fantasy, he escapes his mother, finds a wife, has children, and grows old—only to lose it all when his real-life anxiety intrudes as a monstrous, phallic stalking figure. This segment literalizes the film’s core thesis: Beau’s fear is so profound that even his happiest dream must end in apocalyptic loss. The film argues that the most fundamental horror