Phantom Thread

Phantom Thread(2017)

R
12/25/2017 (US)Drama, Romance2h 10m
7.3

"Whatever you do, do it carefully"

Overview

In 1950s London, a renowned dressmaker's meticulous lifestyle begins drastically changing as his relationship with his young muse intensifies.

Paul Thomas Anderson

Director

Paul Thomas Anderson

Writer

Where to Watch

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Media

Official Trailer

Official Trailer

Trailer

Reynolds Woodcock Meets Alma

Reynolds Woodcock Meets Alma

Clip

The Satisfying ASMR of Phantom Thread

The Satisfying ASMR of Phantom Thread

Clip

Daniel Day-Lewis Makes a Scene

Daniel Day-Lewis Makes a Scene

Clip

Daniel Day-Lewis' Quotable Confrontations

Daniel Day-Lewis' Quotable Confrontations

Clip

10 Minute Preview

10 Minute Preview

Clip

For The Hungry Boy (Deleted Scenes)

For The Hungry Boy (Deleted Scenes)

Clip

You Found Me

You Found Me

Clip

I Don't Need You

I Don't Need You

Clip

You Have No Taste

You Have No Taste

Clip

Interruption

Interruption

Clip

Confirmed Bachelor

Confirmed Bachelor

Clip

You Can Shut Right Up

You Can Shut Right Up

Clip

Alma

Alma

Clip

Behind the Scenes (with unreleased demos by Jonny Greenwood)

Behind the Scenes (with unreleased demos by Jonny Greenwood)

Behind the Scenes

PHANTOM THREAD | Camera Tests

PHANTOM THREAD | Camera Tests

Behind the Scenes

Academy Conversations: Phantom Thread

Academy Conversations: Phantom Thread

Featurette

Camera Tests

Camera Tests

Behind the Scenes

Paul Thomas Anderson on Lesley Manville's performance in PHANTOM THREAD

Paul Thomas Anderson on Lesley Manville's performance in PHANTOM THREAD

Featurette

Paul Thomas Anderson on How he cast Alma in PHANTOM THREAD

Paul Thomas Anderson on How he cast Alma in PHANTOM THREAD

Featurette

Paul Thomas Anderson on writing PHANTOM THREAD

Paul Thomas Anderson on writing PHANTOM THREAD

Featurette

Own it now on 4K, Blu-ray, DVD & Digital

Own it now on 4K, Blu-ray, DVD & Digital

Teaser

Costume Featurette

Costume Featurette

Featurette

Q&A Featurette

Q&A Featurette

Featurette

Sneak Preview Announcement

Sneak Preview Announcement

Teaser

Tickets on Sale Now

Tickets on Sale Now

Teaser

Sneak Preview Announcement

Sneak Preview Announcement

Teaser

Social

T
A review by The Movie Waffler

Written on February 14, 2018

Should you decide to visit your local cinema to take in a showing of Phantom Thread, Paul Thomas Anderson's latest offbeat character study, you might want to make a bit more effort with your wardrobe than you're accustomed to for such outings. After spending 130 minutes totally immersed in the world of 1950s high fashion, I felt like an utter rube walking out of the cinema in my jeans and hoody combo.

Phantom Thread is as immersive as cinema gets. From its opening sequence, which takes us inside the House of Woodcock, a London fashion house run in quietly tyrannical fashion by renowned dressmaker Reynolds Woodcock (Daniel Day Lewis), Anderson's film dismisses any thoughts we might have of our own world of 2018. As we witness Reynolds go about his daily grooming routine it becomes clear we're watching a movie about a perfectionist, one made by a perfectionist, and starring a perfectionist in what is reputedly his final acting role.

Set in his ways like a tree set in concrete, Reynolds knows what he likes, and he likes what he knows. As such, his relationships with the many admiring members of the opposite sex (the film is set at a time when no man was more attractive than one who made things; and if those things happened to make women feel beautiful, like Reynolds' gowns, all the better) rarely get past the following morning's breakfast, where idle chit chat and toast buttering irritate him to a laughably over the top degree.

It's during breakfast away from home, in a small country café, that Reynolds meets Alma (Vicky Krieps), a pretty Eastern European waitress who is won over by his flirtatious charm and accepts his invitation for a dinner date. The relationship blooms quickly and Reynolds invites her into his home, teaching her the ways of his trade.

It doesn't take long for Alma's ways to begin annoying the fiercely independent and somewhat narcissistic Reynolds, and her presence begins to disrupt his work - she's become an anti-muse! Reynolds' assumption that she will follow the other women in his past and leave quietly once exposed to his spoilt brat boorishness couldn't be more wrong however. Alma is determined to make the relationship work, even if she has to take extreme measures.

Read the rest of Eric Hillis's review at http://www.themoviewaffler.com/2018/01/new-release-review-phantom-thread.html