badelf
June 10, 2026
Richard Ayoade's The Double, based loosely on Dostoevsky's novel of the same name, unfolds in a world that feels equal parts Kafka and Orwell, a bureaucratic nightmare rendered in sickly yellow fluorescents and impossible architecture. The tone is oppressively dark, deliberately nonsensical; this is a universe where logic has left the building, where every interaction carries the threat of absurdist cruelty. The film takes Dostoevsky's central question and makes it visceral: we all maintain multiple identities, slipping between our work self, our social self, our private self with practiced ease. We juggle these versions without much trouble, or even thought, because they remain under our control, aspects of a coherent whole. But what happens when two of these identities come into direct conflict, when they can no longer coexist, when one threatens to consume the other entirely? Jesse Eisenberg delivers a phenomenal performance, creating two completely opposite identities that somehow inhabit the same physical form. His Simon is all nervous energy and apologetic existence, a man so diminished he barely registers in rooms he occupies. His James is confident, charismatic, effortlessly claiming the space and recognition that Simon cannot. Watching Eisenberg navigate between these polarities, you believe utterly in both; more disturbingly, you recognize the war between them, the way our bolder impulses can make our timid ones unbearable, the way our shadow selves can devour us from within. Ayoade traps us in Simon's psychological collapse with claustrophobic precision, offering no escape, no relief, no easy resolution. The film asks uncomfortable questions about identity, authenticity, and whether the self is something stable or merely a collection of competing performances, some more viable than others.