The Commercial Appeal

Madcap metaverses meld in ‘Everything Everywhere’

- Jake Coyle

“Everything Everywhere All at Once” is your standard multiverse martial arts movie about filing your taxes and midlife regret in which googly eyes, everything bagels and fanny packs play vital supporting roles and portals to parallel existences are opened not with a spell but with paper cuts.

The movie, in theaters now, is by Daniel Kwan and Daniel Scheinert, the filmmaking duo known as the “the Daniels,” whose first film, the buddy movie “Swiss Army Man,” co-starred Daniel Radcliffe as a very flatulent corpse.

“Everything Everywhere All at Once,” though, is more ambitious. It’s possible that the distance has never before been so great between a movie’s mundane storyline – in this case, a Chinese immigrant laundromat owner trying to file her taxes – and what extreme shape it takes. Rarely has a trip to the IRS yielded such cosmic, metaphysic­al digression­s as it does in “Everything Everywhere All at Once,” an antic, anarchic and yet affecting movie with the spin cycle set to supercolli­der.

“The universe is so much bigger than you realize,” says Joy (Stephanie Hsu), daughter of Evelyn Wang (Michelle Yeoh), at one point in the film.

And though “Everything Everywhere All at Once” (a movie that very much lives up to its title) can verge on overload, it’s this liberating sense of limitless possibilit­y that the movie leaves you filled with, both in its freewheeli­ng anything-goes playfulnes­s and in its surprising­ly tender portrait of existentia­l despair. Quite an accomplish­ment for a film that hinges on properly formatted tax receipts.

In the movie’s chaotic first moments, Evelyn is balancing piles of paperwork in the apartment she shares with her kind but naive husband Waymond (Ke Huy Quan, the actor famous for playing as a kid Short Round in “Temple of Doom” and Data in “The Goonies”) ahead of the impending visit of her disapprovi­ng father (James Hong, now 93 but no less animated), while attending to the needs of customers in the laundromat downstairs. At the same time, Joy is introducin­g her girlfriend, a label that Evelyn doesn’t want her father to hear. Their fraught relationsh­ip is even clearer when Evelyn chases down Joy in the parking lot for what seems intended to be a warmer exchange. Instead, she blurts out that Joy needs to eat less.

The dissatisfa­ction, we immediatel­y grasp, is really Evelyn’s own. Divorce papers are circulatin­g. Yeoh, extraordin­ary here, plays Evelyn as frustrated and disoriente­d, bitter that her life has turned out to be a circle of laundry and taxes. Something has gone terribly wrong. When she, Waymond and her dad go to visit the IRS auditor (Jamie Lee Curtis), their humdrum reality starts to cleave in ways that will scrutinize the choices Evelyn has made leading to this scattered moment.

There at the IRS, while Evelyn is halflisten­ing to how she might lose her business, a metaverse intrudes. A more capable version of Waymond hailing from another dimension (the “alpha verse”) takes her aside to warn of a new evil that is tearing through the many levels of existence that, he explains, were all created by each decision Evelyn has ever made. Spider-man fused planes of roughly similar superhero realms, but Evelyn’s multiverse is an infinite matrix of what might have been.

It’s possible that I’m making “Everything Everywhere All at Once” sound clearer than it actually comes across. These things get explained but the pace is never not hectic.

 ?? A24 VIA AP ?? Jamie Lee Curtis, left, and Michelle Yeoh appear in a scene from “Everything Everywhere All at Once.”
A24 VIA AP Jamie Lee Curtis, left, and Michelle Yeoh appear in a scene from “Everything Everywhere All at Once.”

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