Tag Archives: Jesse Armstrong

MountainHead Review


Written and directed by Jesse Armstrong who mesmerized viewers around the world with the HBO series Succession. Succession ran for four seasons and took home many nominations and awards. Armstrong’s powerhouse capability is to showcase his characters’ motives in business which often involve greed and morals. These issues are also featured in his newest film MountainHead. The setting is a weekend getaway for CEOs and corporate executive where there is much at stake to gain or lose. MountainHead made me feel like an avalanche of success or betrayal was going to be triggered at any moment.

The many wonders of MountainHead spiral amongst four friends: Randall (Steve Carell), Souper/Hugo Van Yalk (Jason Schwartzman), Venis (Corey Michael Smith), and Jeff (Ramy Youssef). These distinguished gentlemen decide to have a getaway at a high-end mansion in the snowy mountains of Park City, Utah. The millionaire’s dream home is outfitted with fancy fireplaces, a bowling alley, and a screening room. However, do these gentlemen want to have a weekend to party?

The stressors of the film start almost instantly. There are bad vibes due to AI technologies in Venis’ business, many of which take place overseas. Bad information spirals which has the potential to lead to all kinds of powerful impacts. The film’s writing is dazzling in MountainHead due to the characterizations of the friends’ relationships. For example, when it becomes clear that there is a potential financial gain for Jeff, Randall, Souper, or all, a line of betrayal and misinformation often follows. The envy and power at play boils down to one critical question…who has more to lose?

The film’s dynamic is bold since these individuals are successful and able to find loopholes in the system. I expected this pattern from Armstrong, because it is similar to Succession. CEOs take risks and executives deceptively go behind each other’s backs. Each move has positive and negative consequences. The legality of the choices will determine the outcome in MountainHead. Who will play the cards right? Will Venis find a way out of his corruption? Will Jeff use Venis as a means for gain? Will Randall blindside anyone? Finally, how does Souper feel about the whole host of issues? The news spirals throughout their getaway and MountainHead leaves its audience wondering if the men are friends or foes.

The film has a creative foundation that is amplified by the conflicts among databases and AI usage. The traffic leads tointense debates and theories among the four friends. Souper uses the filthiest verbiage, and Jeff leans on accuracy from the present outlooks. Randall and Venis view themselves as extremely intelligent. The competitive powerhouses weave together a landscape of knowledge that is irresistible. Media branding and individuality is at the center of the story in MountainHead. 

The fears, theories and anxiety as they await an outcome are all critical. As seen through the performances of Carell, Schwartzman, Smith, and Youssef, there is no clear equation to calculate what profits can be achieved or salvaged for these business moguls. The movie is like Succession on a weekend getaway adventure. When electrical output slips through the cracks, the media begins to rise which reveals weaknesses and sends cinematic jolts in MountainHead. The film is invigorating because it successfully mixes mental stressors and risks. Four out of four stars for MountainHead.