5 Reasons Succession Fans May Love Mountainhead, & 5 Reasons They May Hate Jesse Armstrong’s Movie

WARNING: SPOILERS ahead for Mountainhead.

Fans of Jesse Armstrong’s award-winning family drama series Succession will have plenty of reasons to either love or hate his first feature-length film, Mountainhead. Although Succession ended in 2023 after four outstanding seasons, which some viewers may argue was too short a run, the impact of the hit HBO show is still felt today. Mountainhead doesn’t specifically exist in the narrative world of Succession – even though they’re both essentially set in the modern world – but there are no mentions of the Roy family or their media business, Waystar Royco.

Succession creator Jesse Armstrong wrote and directed Mountainhead, his very first project since Succession concluded. While Succession received rave reviews and a Rotten Tomatoes score of 95% across all four seasons, Mountainhead received much less favorable reviews, resulting in an RT critic score of 76% paired with a surprisingly low audience score of 28%. Steve Carell leads the cast of Mountainhead as Randall, a billionaire on a mountainside vacation with fellow wealthy tech personalities, Venis (Cory Michael Smith), Jeff (Ramy Youssef), and Hugo Van Yalk aka Souper (Jason Schwartzman).

10

Love: Mountainhead Is Jesse Armstrong’s Directorial Debut

Armstrong Had Never Directed A Movie Or TV Episode Before

Mountainhead-Cast-&-Character-Guide

Armstrong has gone from creating a TV dynasty to directing his first feature-length film with Mountainhead. While the film somewhat resembles two back-to-back episodes of Succession, there are certain structural requirements for a movie that differ from those of a TV script, primarily due to the significant difference in story length. Armstrong has written screenplays for film before, such as In the Loop, Four Lions, and Downhill, but Mountainhead marks his first-ever feature film directorial effort. In fact, Armstrong never directed any episode in any of his acclaimed series, including Succession and Peep Show, making Mountainhead his directorial debut in both film and TV.

9

Hate: Mountainhead’s Main Characters Are Detestable

They Lack The Charm & Likability Of The Roy Family

Venis (Cory Michael Smith) looking outside in Mountainhead

Image via Max

While each member of the Roy family has their own unattractive and immoral qualities, the main characters in Mountainhead are truly detestable and at times insufferable. That’s certainly intentional and part of the overall satire running throughout the movie, but it becomes nearly impossible to find any likable or redeeming qualities in all but one of the four lead characters. Creating a movie like Mountainhead is a challenge from the start, since these characters are meant to represent some of the most powerful yet childish men on the planet. If you’re furious while watching Mountainhead, that’s kind of the point, but it doesn’t make for a lighthearted watch.

8

Love: Mountainhead Has A Familiar Billionaire Focus

The Movie Gives Sharp Inside Access To This Rare POV

Jeff (Ramy Youssef) smiling with a drink in hand in Mountainhead

Image via Max

If you’re looking for an accurate portrayal of the modern tech billionaire, Mountainhead is probably the best movie available to dive into the rarified slice of life. There’s a natural sense of camaraderie between the four main characters based solely on the fact that they’re all wealthy and successful. If one of them were not, then there would be virtually no reason for the other three to talk to them, from their elitist point of view.

These billionaires (although Souper is a mere multimillionaire who is desperate to earn his first billion, or “b-nut”) have an emergency bunker fit for kings while they propel AI-driven chaos, redefining a new line between the “haves and have-nots.”

7

Hate: Mountainhead Has Too Much Tech Bro Jargon

People Outside The Tech Space Will Have To Look Words Up

Jason Schwartzman at a table staring in Mountainhead

Mountainhead is authentic with its frequent use of real-world tech bro jargon, but it makes it hard to fully understand what the characters are talking about from the outside looking in. Certain buzzwords are completely foreign to the average viewer or people who aren’t involved in the tech space, some of them technical, and others an evolved form of tech bro slang.

Mountainhead is authentic with its frequent use of real-world tech bro jargon, but it makes it hard to fully understand what the characters are talking about from the outside looking in.

Personally, I appreciate the research that Armstrong must have done to include so much of this particular vocabulary, but there were many words I had to guess what they meant based on context, since I had never heard of them before. This can be a bit disorienting or frustrating for viewers who don’t want to pause and Google every so often.

6

Love: Steve Carell & Main Cast Create An Entertaining Dynamic

Many Viewers Love To Hate These Awful & Narcissistic Characters

Steve Carell is looking to the side in Mountainhead

Steve Carell and his co-stars were certainly well cast for their Mountainhead roles and brought a lot to the table in terms of making these characters memorable and entertaining. Whether you fully understand the buzzwords and plot or not, Carell and the main cast of Mountainhead are snappy and witty enough for them to be understood based on their performances alone. There’s a general comedic but menacing sense in all of these characters, and each comes equipped with their own set of “icks” and terrible traits. It’s certainly entertaining to watch these awful people lie and manipulate with such laughable self-seriousness, making them lovable to hate.

5

Hate: Mountainhead’s Plot Feels Too Close To Home

It Makes Viewers Feel Powerless & Hopeless About The Future Of The World

Venis (Cory Michael Smith) a little stressed in Mountainhead

Image via Max

Mountainhead’s plot can best be described as uncomfortable, given the nonchalance of these out-of-touch tech billionaires letting deepfake images and videos cause global unrest. These billionaires are essentially playing god and treating humanity like players in a video game, which is a pretty eerie feeling from the comfort of your living room couch.

These billionaires are essentially playing god and treating humanity like players in a video game, which is a pretty eerie feeling from the comfort of your living room couch.

The film feels like it’s presenting a mᴀssive problem with the state of the world and the unchecked status of American capitalism, only to end with the feeling that there’s nothing anyone can do about it. These types of immature, egotistical A-holes have so much power and so little concern for people other than themselves, which is terrifying.

4

Love: Mountainhead’s Satire Is Spot On

Armstrong Creates Effective Scenarios For These Human Monsters

Jeff talks to Randall with his hands around his shoulders in Mountainhead

Like Succession, the satire element of Mountainhead is what makes it most entertaining and tolerable. Everything from a lipstick net-worth ritual to a comedic attempted murder plot makes these types of people look like power-hungry buffoons and very strange monsters. There are notes throughout Mountainhead that point to how miserable and, in some cases, apathetic these billionaires are, overcompensating with money, power, and success to cover up deep insecurities and whatnot. While these emotional elements aren’t really explored, Armstrong’s satire is effective towards what Mountainhead is actually about.

3

Hate: Mountainhead Isn’t A Laugh Out Loud Comedy

It’s Very Much A Drama, While Succession Was A Dark Comedy

Mountainhead will make viewers feel a variety of emotions – perhaps jealousy or even despair – but the comedy is a bit hit-or-miss. The film doesn’t feel like it’s trying to make you laugh, and if it is, the humor may not be as effective because the characters are so insufferable. There are moments you may want to laugh, but don’t want to give any more credit to these egomaniacs. For me, I found Jason Schwartzman’s character to be the funniest because of how sad he is beneath his mᴀssive net worth, which his friends consider low. The way he belittles himself and cares so much about what his more wealthy friends think is as funny as it is pitiful.

2

Love: Mountainhead Has An Immersive Succession Aesthetic

Mountainhead’s Tone & Look Are Undoubtedly Inspired By Succession

There’s no question Armstrong was behind the vision of Mountainhead, which has a cold yet impressive aesthetic that does feel somewhat nostalgic for Succession fans. The natural mountainside setting in Mountainhead reminded me of when the Roys and the Waystar team went to Lukas Matsson’s house in Norway in Succession season 4, episode 5. If you called Mountainhead a spin-off of Succession, you wouldn’t really be wrong. The same creator, character archetypes, and elitist setting make Mountainhead a bit of a sister project to Succession. That said, a fifth season of Succession, or an actual Succession movie, would have been much better.

1

Hate: Mountainhead’s Ending Is Bleaker Than Succession

Randall Is Certainly No Kendall Roy

Steve Carell looking to the side in Mountainhead

The ending of Mountainhead is bleak and features no Roy-family catharsis as in the ending of Succession season 4. Steve Carell’s Randall is driven away, realizing that the deal he weaseled out of Ramy Youssef’s Jeff is off, and Cory Michel Smith’s Venis is going to do what’s best for him at the end of the day.

Randall starts to tear up silently, reminiscent of those classic Kendall Roy scenes of him looking lost or distraught in the backseat of a car, but it’s incredibly easy not to feel bad for him. He’s upset because Ven’s deal with Jeff means that he may not be able to upload his consciousness to the cloud, which any normal person watching Mountainhead would not have any sympathy for. He does, however, look like the loneliest man in the world, which is gratifying.

Related Posts

After Seeing The Newest Casting For ᴅᴇᴀᴅpool, I’m So Curious About Whether The MCU Will Officially Recast Ryan Reynolds After Avengers: Secret Wars

After Seeing The Newest Casting For ᴅᴇᴀᴅpool, I’m So Curious About Whether The MCU Will Officially Recast Ryan Reynolds After Avengers: Secret Wars

After seeing the newest casting for ᴅᴇᴀᴅpool, I’m even more curious about how the MCU will handle ᴅᴇᴀᴅpool going forward, and whether the actor will remain in…

I’m Shocked At How Little Tom Hiddleston Appears In The New Stephen King Movie

I’m Shocked At How Little Tom Hiddleston Appears In The New Stephen King Movie

The Life of Chuck is the latest Stephen King adaptation to hit theaters, taking the story of the novella of the same name, which was released in…

I Can’t Believe How To Train Your Dragon’s Live-Action Remake Works So Well

I Can’t Believe How To Train Your Dragon’s Live-Action Remake Works So Well

The following contains spoilers for How to Train Your Dragon, now playing in theatersI can’t believe how well the live-action remake of How to Train Your Dragon…

“I Was Seen As A Terrible Actress”: Keira Knightley Reflects On Public Reaction After Pirates Of The Caribbean

“I Was Seen As A Terrible Actress”: Keira Knightley Reflects On Public Reaction After Pirates Of The Caribbean

Keira Knightley is now known as one of the most respected and acclaimed actors around but there was a time when she received very negative reviews for…

“You Can Always See It Coming”: Henry Cavill’s 0M Box Office Bomb Addressed By Co-Star Bryce Dallas Howard

“You Can Always See It Coming”: Henry Cavill’s $200M Box Office Bomb Addressed By Co-Star Bryce Dallas Howard

Bryce Dallas Howard knows what it’s like to star in a movie that bombs at the box office, and she said it is often easy to see…

Over 30 Years Later, Val Kilmer’s Oscars Snub For Tombstone Looks Even Worse

Over 30 Years Later, Val Kilmer’s Oscars Snub For Tombstone Looks Even Worse

Val Kilmer easily turned in one of the best roles in his career as Doc Holliday in Tombstone, and the fact he didn’t receive an Oscar nomination…