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Last updated: 11 Jun 2026 at 20:40 UTC

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Review of by Nate Z — 20 Dec 2017

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It feels like Woody Allen is trying to recapture his magic from Blue Jasmine, a character study of a tragic modern Blanche DuBois coming undone by her bad decisions. Whereas that film rightfully garnered Cate Blanchett an Oscar, Wonder Wheel is not going to do much for its own tragic heroine, Kate Winslet. She plays Ginny, and she's stuck in a dull marriage, a dull life as a waitress at a Coney Island diner, and she keeps thinking of the life she could have and should have had as an aspiring actress. She has a summer affair with Mickey (Justin Timberlake), a lifeguard who wants to be a writer with experiences. Ginny's affair is jeopardized when Mickey starts seeing her stepdaughter, Carolina (Juno Temple), who is on the run from her own mobster husband. All of this melodrama is kept at a fever pitch, and the film feels far too stagy, with characters careening in limited locations and having long, combative conversations. The cinematography is gorgeous as sets and people are draped with glowing, amber waves. Winslet's character is not nearly as compelling as Allen intends as a tragic heroine being laid low by her flaws. She's not exactly likeable but she's also not exactly interesting, not like Blue Jasmine. Losing her fling to a younger woman makes her even more desperate and self-destructive, which amplifies Winslet's fussy and broad acting. Timberlake is strangely the narrator of this story and has several fourth wall breaking moments, and it doesn't work, especially since his character is more a cobbled together cipher. There's an odd subplot where Ginny's young son is a pyromaniac and it adds nothing but stress. The story doesn't add up to much and the characters just aren't that interesting; they're loud and abrasive but they don't tap into anything larger about the human condition. It's Allen's half-baked homage to Eugene O'Neill. In a most unexpected move, I think the best actor in this movie is Jim Belushi as Ginny's dimwitted husband. I think that says everything you need to know about Wonder Wheel, an up-and-down melodrama that has its mind set as a theatrical production and never leaves that space.

Nate's Grade: C+.

This review of Wonder Wheel (2017) was written by on 20 Dec 2017.

Wonder Wheel has generally received mixed reviews.

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