Ari Aster
Ari Aster (born July 15, 1986) is an American film director, screenwriter, and producer recognized for crafting psychological horror films that dissect familial trauma, grief, and existential unease through meticulous craftsmanship and unflinching narratives.[1][2] Born in New York City to a Jewish family with a poet mother and musician father, Aster honed his skills at the American Film Institute, where his thesis short The Strange Thing About the Johnsons (2011) provoked discussion for its raw exploration of abuse dynamics.[1][3] His feature-length debut, Hereditary (2018), achieved commercial success with over $80 million in worldwide box office earnings and earned widespread critical praise for Toni Collette's performance and its genre subversion, marking Aster as a key figure in elevating horror's artistic standing.[2][4] Follow-up films Midsommar (2019) and Beau Is Afraid (2023) further showcased his penchant for daylight dread and surreal odysseys, though the latter underperformed financially, prompting personal reflection on his self-scripting approach.[1][5] In 2025, Aster directed Eddington, a Western-inflected satire on cultural polarization starring Joaquin Phoenix, which competed at the Cannes Film Festival and elicited polarized responses for its provocative take on American societal fractures.[6][7]Early life and education
Family background and childhood
Ari Aster was born on July 15, 1986, in New York City to Ashkenazi Jewish parents.[8] [9] His father worked as a jazz musician and drummer, while his mother, Bobbi Lurie, pursued visual arts before transitioning to poetry.[8] [10] He has one younger brother, and the family's creative pursuits shaped an environment rich in artistic expression from an early age.[8] Aster's immediate family dynamics emphasized narrative and performance, with his parents' respective engagements in music and poetry providing foundational exposure to storytelling techniques and emotional depth.[11] This artistic household, rooted in Jewish cultural traditions, likely contributed to early sensibilities around themes of inheritance and familial ritual, though Aster has described himself as non-practicing in religion while identifying proudly as Jewish.[12] His childhood experiences within this setting preceded broader external influences, focusing instead on intimate, personal interactions that honed an innate interest in human psychology and dread.[13]Relocation and formative influences
Aster's family relocated from New York City to Chester, England, shortly after his birth in 1986, where his father attempted to establish a jazz nightclub.[8] [14] The family returned to the United States around age 10, settling in Santa Fe, New Mexico, where Aster spent his adolescence through high school amid the region's sparse, high-desert landscape.[15] [16] This shift from denser urban environments to New Mexico's relative isolation contributed to a solitary upbringing, compounded by a childhood stutter that limited interactions beyond his immediate family, potentially cultivating the introspective tendencies evident in his later thematic preoccupations with emotional seclusion and familial tension.[16] [17] In New Mexico, Aster developed an early obsession with horror cinema, immersing himself in the genre without structured guidance, which laid the groundwork for his self-directed approach to storytelling.[18] This period marked the onset of informal experimentation with narrative techniques, focusing on building dread through elemental pacing and psychological unease rather than relying on conventional tropes.[19] Parallel to his cinematic interests, exposure to classical literature, particularly Greek tragedies such as Sophocles' Women of Trachis, shaped his understanding of inexorable fate, petty divine intervention, and cycles of familial destruction—motifs that recur undiluted in his work as mechanisms of inevitable downfall.[20] [21] Aster has noted the comedic absurdity in these ancient texts' portrayals of capricious gods, informing a realist lens on human vulnerability to uncontrollable forces over supernatural exaggeration.[20]Formal training in filmmaking
Aster pursued formal training in filmmaking beginning with a Bachelor of Fine Arts degree in film from the Santa Fe University of Art and Design (formerly the College of Santa Fe), where he graduated around 2010 after studying screenwriting and production basics, including early short films and film criticism for local publications.[22][23] He then enrolled in the American Film Institute (AFI) Conservatory's MFA program in Directing, part of the Class of 2010, an intensive two-year conservatory model emphasizing practical collaboration among disciplines to produce narrative-driven short films under professional conditions.[24][25] Aster's capstone work at AFI was the thesis short film The Strange Thing About the Johnsons (2011), a 29-minute psychological drama exploring taboo familial dynamics through deliberate pacing and visual restraint, which premiered at the Slamdance Film Festival and circulated online, drawing festival screenings and polarized responses for its unflinching content despite technical polish in editing and performance direction.[26][27] This project served as a rigorous test of his ability to execute cohesive, causality-focused narratives within constrained resources, bridging student exercises to industry scrutiny.Career
Pre-feature short films and initial recognition (2008-2017)
Ari Aster's professional filmmaking career commenced with a series of short films produced primarily during and immediately after his studies at the American Film Institute Conservatory. His breakthrough short, The Strange Thing About the Johnsons (2011), served as his thesis project and premiered at the Slamdance Film Festival, earning early notice for its unflinching portrayal of domestic dysfunction.[28] Uploaded to Vimeo shortly thereafter, the 29-minute live-action piece provoked widespread online discussion and backlash owing to its graphic exploration of reversed power dynamics in familial abuse, amassing substantial views and establishing Aster's reputation for boundary-pushing content in indie circles.[26] Building on this momentum, Aster directed additional shorts that circulated via Vimeo and select festivals, fostering a niche audience attuned to his emerging command of tension and subversion. Beau (2011), a 5-minute work depicting a man's thwarted attempt to leave his apartment amid mounting paranoia, functioned as a conceptual prototype for motifs of maternal entanglement later refined in his features.[29] Further entries included the 7-minute animated Munchausen (2013), which critiqued fabricated illness through a Pixar-esque lens, and Basically (2014), a comedic vignette on relational awkwardness, both of which reinforced his versatility while gaining traction in horror-adjacent online communities.[30] These efforts yielded incremental validation but no immediate commercial breakthroughs, prompting Aster to pivot toward feature development around 2012. He pitched numerous scripts to producers and studios over the ensuing years, encountering consistent rejections amid perceptions of his material as overly esoteric or unmarketable within conventional horror parameters.[31] Undeterred, Aster iterated on concepts drawn from personal observations of grief and trauma, submitting over a half-dozen treatments that were declined before securing representation and interest from boutique distributors. This phase of tenacity aligned with broader indie ecosystem dynamics, where viral shorts often served as proof-of-concept gateways rather than direct pipelines to funding.[17] By 2017, the cumulative impact of Aster's short-form output—particularly the lingering notoriety of The Strange Thing About the Johnsons—facilitated a pivotal alliance with A24, which optioned his script for what became Hereditary.[31] This partnership, rooted in the distributor's affinity for auteur-driven genre fare, validated Aster's persistence against prior industry dismissals and positioned him for his debut feature, greenlit after years of honing narratives resistant to mainstream sanitization.Breakthrough with Hereditary (2018)
Ari Aster's feature directorial debut, Hereditary, stemmed from a screenplay he developed after writing multiple prior scripts that did not advance to production.[32] The project gained traction when A24 acquired the rights, enabling principal casting including Toni Collette as Annie Graham, a role Aster pursued early due to her proven range in conveying emotional depth.[33] Supporting roles went to Gabriel Byrne as Steve Graham, Alex Wolff as Peter, and newcomer Milly Shapiro as Charlie, with Ann Dowd as Joan.[34] Production occurred in Utah from late May to July 2017 on a 32-day schedule, utilizing locations in Park City and Salt Lake City alongside custom-built interior sets on soundstages to evoke a dollhouse-like aesthetic for the family home.[35] [36] The film adhered to a production budget under $10 million, reflecting indie horror constraints while prioritizing practical effects and atmospheric tension.[37] Hereditary premiered at the Sundance Film Festival on January 21, 2018, in the Midnight section, where it elicited strong audience and critic responses for its intensity.[38] It received a wide theatrical release on June 8, 2018, grossing $44.1 million domestically and $82.8 million worldwide, yielding substantial returns and surpassing prior A24 benchmarks to signal a resurgence in elevated horror profitability.[39] [40] Critics lauded the film's unsparing portrayal of grief's disorienting and irrational effects on familial bonds, distinguishing it from conventional horror by grounding supernatural elements in psychological realism rather than formulaic scares.[41] [42] Collette's performance as a mother unraveling amid compounded losses drew particular acclaim, earning her nominations including for the Independent Spirit Award, while Aster's direction marked his emergence as a distinctive voice in genre filmmaking.[39] This success propelled Aster from short-film circuits to major studio interest, establishing Hereditary as the catalyst for his subsequent projects.[43]Expansion into folk horror and surrealism: Midsommar and Beau Is Afraid (2019-2023)
Following the critical and commercial success of Hereditary, Ari Aster directed Midsommar (2019), a folk horror film that shifted from enclosed, shadowy domestic terror to expansive, daylight-set communal rituals. Produced by A24 with a $9 million budget, the film was primarily shot in Hungary, including locations near Budapest and Budakeszi, after Swedish authorities imposed filming restrictions on pagan-themed content.[44][45] It premiered in competition at the 2019 Cannes Film Festival and was theatrically released in the United States on July 3, 2019, earning $48 million worldwide against its modest production cost.[45] The narrative centers on a grieving American woman drawn into a Swedish cult's midsummer festival, emphasizing ritualistic violence and psychological dissociation under perpetual summer light, which Aster described as a fairy tale-like exploration of trauma rather than conventional scares.[46] This evolution reflected Aster's growing auteur profile, with A24 granting creative freedom to invert horror tropes—replacing nocturnal dread with stark, naturalistic brightness to heighten unease through visibility rather than obscurity.[47] Critics noted the film's deliberate pacing and ethnographic detail, drawing parallels to folk horror traditions while building on Hereditary's grief motifs, though some questioned its length and repetitive emotional beats as signs of unchecked ambition.[48] The project's success, tripling its budget at the box office, solidified Aster's reputation for elevated horror, enabling A24 to greenlight larger-scale endeavors despite the inherent commercial risks of niche, auteur-driven genre fare. Aster's next film, Beau Is Afraid (2023), further embraced surrealism in a three-hour odyssey blending comedy, paranoia, and epic scope, starring Joaquin Phoenix as a hapless man navigating a nightmarish journey amid maternal manipulation and existential dread. Backed by A24 with a $35 million budget—substantially higher than prior efforts—the production expanded Aster's canvas to include animated sequences and sprawling sets, premiering in competition at the 2023 Cannes Film Festival before a limited U.S. release on April 14, 2023.[49] It grossed just $12 million worldwide, marking a box-office disappointment that underscored the causal perils of escalating costs for experimental, non-franchise films post-Hereditary's windfall.[49] Thematically, it probes guilt, anxiety, and overbearing parenthood through Beau's hallucinatory trials, with Phoenix's performance lauded for embodying perpetual victimhood, though detractors cited its indulgent runtime and opaque symbolism as barriers to broader appeal.[50] Reception highlighted Aster's pivot toward absurd, Kafkaesque surrealism over straightforward horror, earning praise for psychological depth—particularly in evoking paranoia as rational amid absurdity—but criticism for alienating narrative sprawl that prioritized vibe over cohesion.[51] This phase cemented Aster's status as an A24 staple for boundary-pushing visions, yet the financial shortfall illustrated how Hereditary's low-budget efficiency fueled riskier bets, with Beau's underperformance signaling market limits for uncompromised auteurism in a blockbuster-dominated landscape.[52]Eddington and contemporary projects (2024-2025)
Following the commercial underperformance of Beau Is Afraid in 2023, Ari Aster transitioned to directing Eddington, a satirical Western examining pandemic-era divisions in America.[53] The film, scripted after Beau Is Afraid, is set in May 2020 in the fictional town of Eddington, New Mexico, where a standoff between a sheriff and mayor escalates into neighbor-against-neighbor conflict amid early COVID-19 lockdowns.[54] Starring Joaquin Phoenix as the sheriff and Pedro Pascal in a supporting role, production took place in New Mexico, evoking the isolation and paranoia of the period through its Western framework.[55] Eddington premiered in competition at the Cannes Film Festival on May 16, 2025, earning a nearly seven-minute standing ovation from audiences while eliciting mixed critical responses.[56] Reviewers praised the film's stellar cast and Aster's bold direction but critiqued its tonal shifts and overstuffed exploration of political polarization, with some noting its reflection of lockdown-induced societal fractures as both provocative and uneven.[55][57] The movie subsequently screened at festivals including the New York Film Festival, where Aster discussed its divisive reception in relation to industry feedback on his prior works.[58] It received a 69% approval rating on Rotten Tomatoes based on early reviews, highlighting its ambition amid debates over its handling of contemporary American tensions.[59] In July 2025, during an appearance on The Big Picture podcast, Aster revealed development on an Eddington sequel alongside concepts for a new horror film and a sci-fi project, signaling his intent to diversify following Beau Is Afraid's box office challenges.[60] On October 3, 2025, he signed with Academy Films for global representation in commercial directing, expanding beyond narrative features while maintaining his auteur profile.[61] These moves reflect Aster's adaptation to critical and commercial dynamics, prioritizing genre experimentation and broader industry engagement.[53]Announced and unproduced works
In July 2025, Ari Aster revealed plans for a sequel to his film Eddington, describing it as a project incorporating returning characters but not a conventional follow-up.[62] He stated that ideas for the film were in early development stages at that time.[60] As of October 2025, no pre-production activities, casting announcements, or filming schedules have been reported for this project.[62] Aster has also expressed interest in developing a new horror film and a separate science fiction project, both originating from concepts he discussed in mid-2025 interviews.[62] These remain at the ideation phase, with no confirmed scripts, financing, or production timelines disclosed.[60] Prior to the production of Hereditary in 2017, Aster wrote eight feature scripts that he ultimately abandoned after determining they did not align sufficiently with his artistic priorities.[32] This pattern of discarding unviable pitches underscores his commitment to advancing only those works rooted in deeply personal thematic explorations, rather than pursuing broader commercial opportunities available at the time.[32]Themes and influences
Exploration of grief, family trauma, and psychological breakdown
Aster's films consistently depict grief not as a transient phase amenable to conventional therapeutic resolution, but as a profound disruptor that unmasks and amplifies inherited familial vulnerabilities, often culminating in irreversible psychological fragmentation. In Hereditary (2018), this manifests through the portrayal of grief as an accelerator of latent hereditary mental disorders, such as schizophrenia-like breakdowns, where familial patterns of dysfunction—rooted in genetic and environmental transmission—override individual agency and lead to systemic collapse without redemptive closure.[63][64] This aligns with empirical psychological evidence on the heritability of conditions like schizophrenia, estimated at 80% genetic influence, underscoring Aster's causal emphasis on intergenerational transmission over superficial coping mechanisms.[65] Similarly, Beau Is Afraid (2023) examines maternal overreach and childhood conditioning as vectors for enduring guilt and paranoia, framing psychological breakdown as an outgrowth of unresolved family imprints that distort reality perception in ways evocative of delusional disorders. Aster has articulated this as an exploration of guilt intertwined with grief, rejecting narratives of personal reinvention in favor of trauma's entrenchment, where protagonists remain ensnared in cycles of self-doubt and relational toxicity.[66][67] Such depictions privilege causal realism, drawing from documented patterns in attachment theory where insecure maternal bonds correlate with heightened adult anxiety and dissociation, often persisting without full mitigation.[68] Across his oeuvre, Aster eschews redemptive arcs that imply trauma's impermanence, instead highlighting dialogue and structural inevitability to convey suffering's foundational role in human psychology—a stance that counters optimistic media portrayals of grief recovery while echoing longitudinal studies showing that severe familial trauma elevates lifetime risks for psychopathology by factors of 2-4 times.[69] This thematic insistence on unhealed wounds reflects a first-principles skepticism toward facile closure, positioning breakdown as an authentic outcome of unchecked inheritance rather than a plot device for uplift.[70] Analyses of his scripts reveal recurring motifs of futile resistance against familial legacies, debunking illusions of autonomy in the face of empirically persistent trauma effects.[71]Cultural and mythological elements
In Hereditary (2018), Ari Aster incorporates occult elements rooted in demonic mythology, including sigils, incantations like "SATONY," and symbolic motifs such as ants representing decay and inheritance, to depict familial trauma manifesting through supernatural invocation.[72][73] These draw from Goetic traditions of spirit conjuration, where hidden family secrets and emotional repression summon malevolent forces, amplifying psychological breakdown within a modern, isolated nuclear family structure.[74] Unlike allegorical interpretations, the film's causal chain posits rituals as catalysts exposing inherent vulnerabilities in secular denial of inherited curses, evidenced by the grandmother's cult involvement predating overt manifestations.[75] Contrasting this, Midsommar (2019) integrates verifiable Swedish midsummer folklore and Norse mythology, including communal ceremonies like maypole dances, psychedelic mushroom rituals linked to pre-Christian Nordic practices, and sacrificial customs inspired by myths of the "dark one."[76][77][78] Aster researched traditions such as menstrual blood in coffee and pubic hair in food from actual Swedish lore, blending them into the Hårga cult's pagan rites to portray a daylight horror where outsiders confront a self-sustaining communal order.[79][80] This setup underscores fractures in secular relationships, with rituals serving not as mere exotica but as mechanisms revealing the insufficiency of individualistic detachment against collective mythic bonds.[81] Across both films, mythological elements function as amplifiers of real societal fissures—grief's inescapability in Hereditary's occult inheritance and relational entropy in Midsommar's folkloric renewal—rather than political allegories absent direct evidence from Aster.[76] While Aster has not explicitly framed his work as a critique of secularism, the rituals' efficacy in exposing modern life's emotional hollows implies a causal realism wherein pre-modern mythic structures persist as latent correctives to atomized existence, per analyses of pagan resurgence motifs in his oeuvre.[81] No verified Jewish mystical influences, such as Kabbalah, underpin these pagan or occult integrations, despite Aster's personal background; speculative links remain unconfirmed in interviews.[82]Personal and cinematic influences
Aster was born on July 15, 1986, into a Jewish family in New York City, the son of a poet mother and a jazz musician father, with a younger brother.[8] His childhood involved personal challenges, including stuttering that affected his speech, which he has discussed in interviews as contributing to themes of isolation and psychological strain in his work.[83] Despite describing his family life as happy and supportive, Aster has indicated that his films mine deeper personal traumas for their portrayal of familial discord and emotional entropy, drawing causal links from lived experiences of vulnerability to narrative explorations of breakdown.[84][46] Cinematically, Aster draws heavily from mid-20th-century masters who built dread through psychological realism rather than overt supernaturalism. He frequently cites Roman Polanski's Rosemary's Baby (1968) as a foundational influence for its intimate construction of paranoia and domestic horror, praising Polanski's personal investment in adapting source material to reflect real-world anxieties.[85][86] Similarly, Stanley Kubrick's precision in evoking unease informs Aster's approach, with Barry Lyndon (1975) named as his favorite Kubrick film for its meticulous depiction of human folly and inevitable decline.[87] Aster's selections prioritize these horror and drama classics—such as Ingmar Bergman's Cries and Whispers (1972) and Nicolas Roeg's Don't Look Now (1973)—over contemporary trends, emphasizing structural rigor and emotional authenticity derived from empirical observation of human behavior.[88][89] Literarily, Aster reports being influenced more by novels than films in some projects, citing Voltaire's Candide and Miguel de Cervantes' Don Quixote as shaping the absurd, picaresque elements in Beau Is Afraid (2023), where protagonists confront chaotic familial and societal inheritances akin to literary archetypes of entropy.[90] This cross-medium approach underscores a causal preference for timeless sources that dissect inheritance and decay without modern ideological overlays, aligning his horror with undiluted examinations of inherited traumas.Directorial style and techniques
Visual and narrative approaches
Aster's visual style, developed in close collaboration with cinematographer Pawel Pogorzelski since their short film work together, prioritizes symmetrical compositions and extended long takes to evoke emotional immobility. In Hereditary (2018), symmetrical framing in family dinner scenes centers the frame on rigid domestic arrangements, drawing viewer attention to implied uniformity while subtle asymmetries emerge to signal underlying discord, thereby heightening perceptual unease through compositional tension.[91] These sequences employ prolonged static shots, often lasting several minutes without cuts, to capture the incremental escalation of verbal confrontations, mirroring the stasis of grief-stricken interactions.[92] Pogorzelski's lighting approach complements this by relying on practical interior sources—such as dim household lamps—that cast unflattering shadows on faces, exposing micro-expressions of trauma without artificial stylization, as evidenced in the film's use of Arri Alexa Mini cameras for high dynamic range that preserves naturalistic detail in low light.[93][94] In Midsommar (2019), this partnership shifts to high-contrast daylight cinematography, where unfiltered natural light during ritualistic outdoor scenes starkly illuminates participants' faces, refusing to soften the visibility of psychological unraveling and instead amplifying its visceral immediacy through overexposure effects on brighter elements.[95] Pogorzelski has noted that such choices stem from Aster's shot-list precision, which precedes crew discussions and enforces exposure of raw human responses over ornamental effects.[96] Narratively, Aster structures revelations through deliberate withholding of causal links, particularly in Beau Is Afraid (2023), where surreal interludes and fragmented dream sequences interrupt linear progression, incrementally disclosing withheld backstory to cultivate escalating paranoia by disorienting audience expectations of narrative reliability.[97] This technique builds cognitive dissonance via episodic reveals—such as Beau's hallucinatory detours—that mimic perceptual distortion without resolving into tidy chronology, as Aster constructs the film's three-hour runtime around unpredictable shifts between mundane peril and fantastical intrusion.[98]Sound design and pacing
Aster's sound design emphasizes subtle foley effects and strategic silences to cultivate unease rooted in psychological realism, eschewing conventional jump scares for auditory cues that mirror everyday disruptions amplified into dread. In Hereditary (2018), supervising sound editor Ryan M. Price and the team layered faint, manipulated ambient noises—such as creaks and distant hums—during grief-stricken family scenes to evoke a pervasive, causal tension, drawing from recordings of organic materials to avoid synthetic exaggeration.[99] This approach extended to gore sequences, where visceral impacts were crafted from blended real-world elements like cracking wood and fluid displacements, heightening emotional authenticity over shock value.[100] In Midsommar (2019), sound editor Gene Park integrated prolonged silences amid natural ambient layers—birdsong, wind, and rustling foliage—to induce disorientation and mimic the film's daylight folk rituals, fostering immersion through auditory sparsity that underscores characters' isolation.[101] Specific foley, such as the head-smashing impact derived from wet animal skin recordings, grounded surreal violence in tactile realism, per foley artist Jay Peck's account.[102] Beau Is Afraid (2023) further distorted expectations by omitting or exaggerating spatial audio cues, with sound designer Paul Hsu employing abnormal sound propagation to reflect the protagonist's paranoia, creating a dreamlike unreality that prioritizes perceptual distortion.[103][104] Complementing this, Aster's pacing relies on extended slow builds to simulate accumulating dread, contrasting the rapid cuts of mainstream horror and allowing tension to emerge from temporal realism. Hereditary runs 127 minutes, with early sequences lingering on domestic inertia to establish familial fracture before escalation.[105] Midsommar's 147-minute director's cut sustains ritualistic elongation, using unhurried progression to mirror cultural immersion's hypnotic pull, though some festival attendees reported fatigue from the deliberate drag.[106][107] Beau Is Afraid, at 179 minutes, amplifies this through episodic sprawl, where prolonged stasis in anxiety-laden vignettes builds viewer empathy via sustained exposure, evidenced by Cannes feedback praising its immersive paranoia despite pacing critiques for inducing restlessness.[108][109] These strategies, informed by Aster's rejection of formulaic frights, prioritize empirical dread—gradual auditory and rhythmic accrual over artificial spikes—for deeper causal engagement.[110]Collaborations with key crew and actors
Aster's collaborations with cinematographer Pawel Pogorzelski span his initial three feature films—Hereditary (2018), Midsommar (2019), and Beau Is Afraid (2023)—where Pogorzelski's use of natural lighting, wide compositions, and subtle distortions created a consistent visual language of unease and immersion, rooted in their prior student partnership at the American Film Institute.[111][112] This recurrence fostered stylistic continuity, as Pogorzelski's techniques amplified Aster's emphasis on environmental dread without relying on traditional horror tropes like shadows or jump cuts. Editor Lucian C. Johnston has contributed to all of Aster's features through Eddington (2025), employing meticulous pacing and rhythmic editing to build tension through elongated sequences and precise synchronization with sound cues, which Johnston credits to Aster's pre-planned shot designs that allow for fluid assembly in post-production.[17][113] Johnston's involvement ensures a unified temporal structure across projects, where cuts serve causal escalation of psychological strain rather than mere montage. Aster partnered with producer Lars Knudsen, co-founding Square Peg in 2019 to oversee production on Midsommar onward, including Beau Is Afraid and Eddington, providing operational stability that preserved Aster's auteur control amid escalating budgets and scopes.[114] A24's executive production role in these films, handling distribution and financing, supported this independence by prioritizing artistic vision over commercial concessions.[1] Recurring actors like Joaquin Phoenix, who starred in Beau Is Afraid (2023) and Eddington (2025), exemplify trust-building in demanding roles requiring prolonged vulnerability and improvisation; Aster noted their prior rapport enabled indirect directorial cues, yielding layered performances of existential fragility.[115][116] Such repetitions minimize rehearsal barriers, directly contributing to character authenticity in Aster's trauma-centric narratives.Filmography
Feature films
| Film | Release Year | Roles | Budget | Worldwide Box Office Gross |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Hereditary | 2018 | Director, Writer | $10 million | $82 million |
| Midsommar | 2019 | Director, Writer | $9 million | $48.5 million |
| Beau Is Afraid | 2023 | Director, Writer, Producer | $35 million | $12.3 million |
| Eddington | 2025 | Director, Writer, Producer | $25 million | $13.3 million |
Short films
Aster's early short films, produced between 2011 and 2016 while he honed his craft at institutions like the American Film Institute Conservatory, were self-financed or low-budget indie projects lacking formal commercial distribution. Instead, they gained traction via online uploads to platforms like Vimeo and YouTube, amassing significant grassroots viewership—particularly The Strange Thing About the Johnsons, which drew millions of views and served as a Vimeo Staff Pick—highlighting Aster's ability to build an audience independently before studio backing.[117][118] These works, often experimental in tone and ranging from dark comedy to psychological unease, premiered at niche festivals but remained accessible digitally, underscoring his origins in the DIY filmmaking scene.| Film Title | Year | Runtime | Key Festivals and Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| The Strange Thing About the Johnsons | 2011 | 29 minutes | Slamdance Film Festival premiere; psychological drama that achieved viral online popularity with millions of views across platforms, establishing Aster's reputation for provocative content.[119] |
| TDF Really Works | 2011 | ~5 minutes | Satirical short on theater dynamics; limited festival exposure but circulated online for its wry humor.[121] |
| Beau | 2011 | ~10 minutes | Early character study; shared via digital channels without major festival runs.[121] |
| Munchausen | 2013 | ~10 minutes | Silent montage exploring maternal separation anxiety; featured in select indie showcases.[122] |
| The Turtle's Head | 2014 | ~12 minutes | Ensemble comedy with familial tensions; online availability drove niche viewership.[121] |
| Basically | 2014 | 15 minutes | New York Film Festival selection; monologue-driven portrait of privilege and ennui starring Rachel Brosnahan, gaining modest online traction.[123][124] |
| C'est La Vie | 2016 | ~15 minutes | Reflective short on life's absurdities; digitally distributed, reflecting Aster's evolving comedic sensibilities.[121] |
Production credits
Ari Aster co-founded the production company Square Peg with Lars Knudsen in 2019, enabling production roles on projects beyond his own directorial efforts. Through Square Peg, Aster has credited as producer or executive producer on select independent films, often distributed by A24, focusing on unconventional narratives in horror, comedy, and surreal genres. These credits reflect a deliberate expansion into supporting emerging directors while maintaining a limited output aligned with his aesthetic sensibilities.[31] Key non-directorial production credits include:| Film | Year | Role | Outcome/Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Dream Scenario | 2023 | Producer | Directed by Kristoffer Borgli; earned $5,742,193 worldwide.[125][126] |
| Sasquatch Sunset | 2024 | Producer | Directed by David and Nathan Zellner; limited theatrical release emphasizing experimental Bigfoot mockumentary style.[127] |
| Bugonia | 2025 | Producer | Directed by Yorgos Lanthimos; remake of Korean sci-fi thriller Save the Green Planet!, released October 2025.[128][129] |
| Death of a Unicorn | 2025 | Executive Producer | Directed by Alex Scharfman; family dark comedy starring Paul Rudd and Jenna Ortega.[2] |
Reception and impact
Critical evaluations across films
Ari Aster's early feature films, Hereditary (2018) and Midsommar (2019), achieved broad critical acclaim for their psychological depth and genre innovation, with Hereditary earning a 90% Tomatometer score on Rotten Tomatoes from over 400 reviews and Midsommar securing 83% from 460 reviews.[131] Critics frequently highlighted Aster's ability to blend familial grief with supernatural elements, creating sustained dread through meticulous buildup rather than jump scares, as evidenced by Metacritic scores of 87 for Hereditary and 72 for Midsommar.[132] These works established Aster as a horror auteur capable of elevating trauma narratives to arthouse levels, though some early dissent noted occasional overreliance on shock for emotional impact. Subsequent films Beau Is Afraid (2023) and Eddington (2025) elicited more divided responses, with Beau Is Afraid at 67% on Rotten Tomatoes (272 reviews) and a Metacritic score of 63, and Eddington at 69% (271 reviews).[59] Reviewers praising innovation commended Beau Is Afraid's surreal odyssey as a bold extension of maternal anxiety themes, yet many critiqued its three-hour runtime and episodic structure as indulgent, with consensus phrasing it as "overstuffed to the point of erasing the line between self-flagellation and self-indulgence."[131] Eddington, premiered at Cannes in May 2025, drew festival jury comments on its satirical take on post-COVID polarization but faced accusations of superficiality in exploring racial and political divides, with one review labeling it a "cynical simulacrum" that reproduces chaos without deeper insight.[57] [133] Across Aster's oeuvre, conservative-leaning critiques, such as those emphasizing moral horror, fault the persistent ambiguity in resolutions—often favoring pagan or chaotic forces over redemptive clarity—as reflective of eroded traditional structures, potentially glamorizing nihilism without causal accountability.[81] In contrast, progressive outlets have lauded the subversion of patriarchal and communal norms, though this praise is tempered by broader data showing accusations of pretentiousness, where elaborate visuals and thematic density are seen by detractors as veiling narrative bloat or unresolved excess rather than genuine profundity.[134] Empirical aggregations like Rotten Tomatoes' critics' consensus underscore this tension, balancing artistic bravura against risks of self-indulgence in Aster's shift from concise horror to expansive, divisive epics.[131]Commercial performance and box office data
Aster's debut feature Hereditary (2018), produced on a $10 million budget, grossed $80.4 million worldwide, with $44.1 million from North America, marking a significant return driven by its low-cost horror formula and A24's targeted marketing to genre enthusiasts.[40][38] Midsommar (2019), budgeted at $9 million, earned $48.0 million globally, including $27.5 million domestically, benefiting from similar arthouse horror appeal but facing audience resistance to its extended 2-hour-28-minute runtime and daylight setting atypical for the genre.[135] Subsequent films saw diminished returns amid rising budgets and shifting market dynamics, including competition from streaming platforms that reduced theatrical commitments for non-blockbuster releases. Beau Is Afraid (2023), with a $35 million production cost, underperformed with just $12.3 million worldwide ($8.2 million domestic), its 179-minute length and surreal narrative limiting mass appeal despite festival hype and A24's expansion strategy.[49][136] Eddington (2025), budgeted at $25 million, followed suit, grossing $13.3 million globally ($10.1 million domestic) after a $4.2 million opening amid summer blockbusters, echoing Beau's trajectory of initial buzz from Cannes but rapid audience drop-off due to niche positioning over broad accessibility.[137][54]| Film | Release Year | Budget (USD) | Worldwide Gross (USD) | Domestic Gross (USD) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Hereditary | 2018 | 10 million | 80.4 million | 44.1 million |
| Midsommar | 2019 | 9 million | 48.0 million | 27.5 million |
| Beau Is Afraid | 2023 | 35 million | 12.3 million | 8.2 million |
| Eddington | 2025 | 25 million | 13.3 million | 10.1 million |