Hedda Gabler finds herself torn between the lingering ache of a past love and the quiet suffocation of her present life. Over the course of one charged night, long-repressed desires and hidden tensions erupt—pulling her and everyone around her into a spiral of manipulation, passion, and betrayal.

Tessa Thompson
as Hedda Gabler

Nina Hoss
as Eileen Lovborg

Imogen Poots
as Thea Clifton

Nicholas Pinnock
as Judge Roland Brack

Tom Bateman
as George Tesman

Finbar Lynch
as Professor Greenwood

Mirren Mack
as Tabitha Greenwood

Jamael Westman
as David

Saffron Hocking
as Jane Ji

Kathryn Hunter
as Bertie
Emily
**Awful acting** I am sorry but tessa thompson is a terrible lead actress. I saw her try to act in this movie as well as West World and she needs to find a new day job. My husband actually started laughing out loud at one of her "serious" scenes. Movie was pretty crummy anyway, I don't think a di...
TriceratopsAU
I don't understand how the lead actress in this keeps getting parts? She's a terrible actress, it's like she is sitting at a table read and just reading her lines aloud. She has absolutely zero charisma and is is definitely not attractive, nor even cute. I guess Hollywood continues to cast people li...
Brent Marchant
Reinterpreting a classic work of art – no matter what medium it might initially be grounded in – can be a tricky task. This is true when jumping from one milieu to another, such as stage to screen, as well when altering the nature or elements of the work, such as its setting, time frame and characte...
CinemaSerf
Right from the start, when we hear “Hedda” (Tessa Thompson) called to the phone, we can discern that Nia DaCosta has shifted the timeline from the late 1800s. Indeed, we now find ourselves in the middle of the 20th century in a grand stately home where her academic husband “George” (Tom Bateman) is ...