After the erotic dramaBaby Girl,Nicole Kidmancontinues her divisive streak with a certified Rotten thriller.Kidman began acting in the 1980s with Australian filmslike the action-comedyBMX Banditsand the critically acclaimedDead Calmbefore achieving international stardom. Her Hollywood breakthrough came in 1990 when she starred opposite Tom Cruise in the NASCAR love-storyDays of Thunder, spawning a variety of leading performances from Stanley Kubrick’sEyes Wide Shutto the black comedyTo Die For.

In the early 2000s,Nicole Kidman’s performancescontinued with back-to-back Oscar-nominated roles fromMoulin Rouge!toThe Hours, the latter scoring the actor her first Best Actress win with her portrayal of Virginia Woolf. In 2017, shedelivered her first Emmy-winning performance in HBO’s drama seriesBig Little Lies. A few years later, she received another Oscar nomination for her performance asLucille Ball inBeing the Ricardos.Kidman’s career spans over three decades, with multiple accolades to show for the prowess she commands on screen. Now, it appears the Hollywood icon’s latest film continues to push the envelope.

Nicole Kidman looking serious in Lioness season 2 trailer

Nicole Kidman’s Holland Debuts With A 50% RT Score

The Psychological Thriller Divides Early Responses

Kidman’s new thriller,Holland, has amassed a divisive score from critics. Directed by Mimi Cave (Fresh) and written by Andrew Sodorski, the dark comedy features Kidman as the teacher and homemaker Nancy Vandergoot after her seemingly idyllic life in Michigan suburbia is turned upside down when she discovers her husband, a local preacher, is harboring a terrible secret. The ensemble cast ofHollandalso includes Gael García Bernal (Y tu mamá también), Matthew Macfadyen (Succession),Jude Hill (A Haunting in Venice)and Rachel Sennott(Bottoms).

Every Nicole Kidman Oscar-Nominated Performance & Which She Won For

Nicole Kidman has been in many great and awarded movies throughout her career, and she has been nominated for an Oscar five times and won once.

Based on 10 critical reviews,Holland hasmade its debut with a 50% ratingonRotten Tomatoes. While some reviews have praised Kidman’s latest film for its atmospheric setting and the slow-burning mystery behind Nancy’s rising sense of dread, other critics have argued that its unconventional and ambiguous storytelling fails to deliver a satisfying payoff. Nonetheless, audiences at SXSW were entirely shocked by a particularly sinister moment that unfolds in the latter half of Mimi Cave’s psychological thriller (viaScreenRant).

Nicole Kidman drinking a glass of milk in Babygirl

Our Take On Kidman’s Holland

A Twisted Ride With Frustrating Spills

I’ve loved Nicole Kidman sinceKubrick’sEyes Wide Shut,butI can’t deny that her last few performances haven’t all landed for me. The striking erotics ofBabygirldid not save the film from its aimless storyline, andHollandseems to suffer from similar pitfalls; it embarks on an ambitious psychological journey only to unravel into an unsatisfying third act. However, Kidman’s dedication to working with women directors in women-led stories is commendable. While half the critics have so far deemedHolland"rotten," the other half are glad to have gone on Kidman and Mimi Cave’s twisted, unpredictable ride.

Holland - Poster