Canadian ReviewsCanadian Reviews
  • What’s On
  • Reviews
  • Digital World
  • Lifestyle
  • Travel
  • Trending
  • Web Stories
Trending Now

Netflix’s new reality show is Pokémon with sharks

These sunset dance parties have popped off in Calgary and they’re free to attend

Member of ’60s Folk-Rock Band Spotted in Rare L.A. Outing

Australia’s Travel & Tourism Sector Anticipated to Inject $315 Billion into Economy by 2025

2025 James Beard Award Winners: Chefs and Restaurants

Auditions (Edmonton): Ecos – Diaspora Diaries/Common Ground, Theater News

Edmonton has a “girly heaven” with over 35 local vendors and a super cutesy vibe

Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
  • Privacy
  • Terms
  • Advertise
  • Contact us
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest Vimeo
Canadian ReviewsCanadian Reviews
  • What’s On
  • Reviews
  • Digital World
  • Lifestyle
  • Travel
  • Trending
  • Web Stories
Newsletter
Canadian ReviewsCanadian Reviews
You are at:Home » Opus’ director unpacks the finale’s gut-punch scene
Lifestyle

Opus’ director unpacks the finale’s gut-punch scene

19 March 20254 Mins Read

Ambition is a great thing. It drives us to seek out bigger and bigger things, or even just something new. No one knows that better than Opus protagonist Ariel (Ayo Edebiri), a music writer who can’t get a single pitch through her editor (at least, without him stealing it). That changes when aging pop star Moretti (John Malkovich) plucks her out of obscurity. The music legend is putting out his first album in almost 30 years, and inviting a select few, including Ariel, to be the first to hear it.

Since Opus is social satire, it doesn’t take long for things to get hinky. And yet Ariel is the only one of the invited journalists who seems clear-eyed enough to see through the haze of Moretti’s stardom. Her drive to tell the real story behind the strangeness of Moretti’s followers pushes her to look past the glitz, glamour, and indigo of Moretti’s compound and see something much more foreboding underneath it all. Unfortunately for her, Opus is social-satire horror — so being a driven, underestimated young woman trapped at a cult-y compound is exactly where writer-director Mark Anthony Green wanted her to be.

[Ed. note: This rest of this post contains spoilers for the end of Opus.]

Image: A24

“Ambition has always been celebrated where I’m from, and I have a tremendous amount; I’m sure too much ambition. The thing about ambition that you have to be careful with is, [highly ambitious people] are designed to ignore red flags,” Green told Polygon in an interview ahead of Opus’ release.

This philosophy leads to Opus’ final twist, and the true twist of the knife for Ariel: Two years after her fateful weekend at Moretti’s, she’s written a bestselling book detailing her time on the compound, the deaths of her fellow journalists, and the underpinnings of his cult philosophy. And as she finds out in a final interview with Moretti, now incarcerated, that’s exactly what he hoped for. Moretti took the fall for a bombastic crime and sent his followers out in the world to spread his ideology, with Ariel’s book as the fuel that helps rocket his ideas to household-name status.

Green pulled much of Opus from his time as a music journalist, though he pointedly notes that none of it is directly based on any specific event or person. He worked with Malkovich to make sure Moretti didn’t feel too much like a fictionalized version of any particular pop star. Still, the film’s anxieties are much more global. To Green, tribalism is the poison pill of our times, infecting everyone and everything. That makes Opus delightfully bleak: The film suggests that it doesn’t matter how much you resist joining a tribe. In the end, you’re going to be part of something.

“In all of the research and the study that I did with cults, so many of them target ambitious people, because you’re highly susceptible and vulnerable as an ambitious person,” Green says. Though, he notes, this is not a problem isolated to ambitious people or cults. “I think it’s probably harder now than it ever has been in human history to not get swept up in someone’s agenda.”

To really drive home his point, Green structured the whole movie with his final rug-pull in mind. The movie rests on Ariel’s shoulders, focusing on “what she wants and how she carries herself.” The violence done by Moretti and his followers has a logic to it, but it serves to balance out the “heady” ideas Green wanted to imbue the film with. Ultimately, he always wanted to leave the scenes between Edebiri and Malkovich one beat away from feeling totally clear — even if it felt like “you could make a whole movie” of just the two of them in a room.

“What I felt was most interesting and fresh is the cat-and-mouse of it, to always be one step shy of feeling like, [That’s] completed, or, This person for sure bested that person. And for them to feel like a true sparring match,” Green says. “I think a great end for a film like this is: It should feel satisfying and incomplete.”

Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Reddit WhatsApp Telegram Email

Related Articles

Netflix’s new reality show is Pokémon with sharks

Lifestyle 16 June 2025

Member of ’60s Folk-Rock Band Spotted in Rare L.A. Outing

Lifestyle 16 June 2025

Prince of Persia remake apparently still on track for 2026, per Ubisoft

Lifestyle 16 June 2025

Cher’s Son, Elijah Blue Allman, Hospitalized After 'Acting Erratically,’ Authorities Confirm

Lifestyle 16 June 2025

Doctor charged with supplying Matthew Perry ketamine agrees to plead guilty | Canada Voices

Lifestyle 16 June 2025

Mario Kart World has 14 ways to dodge a blue shell

Lifestyle 16 June 2025
Top Articles

OANDA Review – Low costs and no deposit requirements

28 April 2024328 Views

What Time Are the Tony Awards? How to Watch for Free

8 June 2025148 Views

Toronto actor to star in Netflix medical drama that ‘Grey’s Anatomy’ fans will love, Canada Reviews

1 April 2025126 Views

Looking for a job? These are Montreal’s best employers in 2025

18 March 2025100 Views
Demo
Don't Miss
Reviews 16 June 2025

Auditions (Edmonton): Ecos – Diaspora Diaries/Common Ground, Theater News

View the original posting: https://commongroundarts.ca/audition-call-ecos/Deadline to submit: June 24, 2025Diaspora Diaries Collective, in partnership with…

Edmonton has a “girly heaven” with over 35 local vendors and a super cutesy vibe

Prince of Persia remake apparently still on track for 2026, per Ubisoft

Cher’s Son, Elijah Blue Allman, Hospitalized After 'Acting Erratically,’ Authorities Confirm

About Us
About Us

Canadian Reviews is your one-stop website for the latest Canadian trends and things to do, follow us now to get the news that matters to you.

Facebook X (Twitter) Pinterest YouTube WhatsApp
Our Picks

Netflix’s new reality show is Pokémon with sharks

These sunset dance parties have popped off in Calgary and they’re free to attend

Member of ’60s Folk-Rock Band Spotted in Rare L.A. Outing

Most Popular

Why You Should Consider Investing with IC Markets

28 April 202419 Views

OANDA Review – Low costs and no deposit requirements

28 April 2024328 Views

LearnToTrade: A Comprehensive Look at the Controversial Trading School

28 April 202441 Views
© 2025 ThemeSphere. Designed by ThemeSphere.
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of use
  • Advertise
  • Contact us

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.