
Andrew Garfield as Hank and Julia Roberts as Alma in “After the Hunt,” from Amazon MGM Studios. Photo Credit: Courtesy of Amazon MGM Studios
Julia Roberts steps into one of her fiercest roles in “After the Hunt,” Luca Guadagnino’s tense psychological thriller that has set off fiery debates since its Venice premiere. Now streaming on Prime Video, the film is poised to spark even more conversation as it reaches living rooms across the world. A Campus Drama That Cuts Deep !
A Crisis That Shatters a Quiet Academic Life
The story unfolds inside Yale’s polished halls, where Roberts plays Alma Imhoff, a sharp and determined philosophy professor chasing a coveted tenure spot. Her closest colleague, Hank — played with cool charm by Andrew Garfield — is both her rival and long-time confidant.
Their world fractures when Maggie, Alma’s bright and ambitious protégé, arrives at her door in distress. She accuses Hank of sexual assault. The revelation drags Alma into a moral storm where loyalty, ambition and buried traumas collide. Every character enters with secrets. Every choice pushes someone closer to ruin.
The fallout ripples through Alma’s home, straining her marriage to Frederik (Michael Stuhlbarg) and drawing in university psychiatrist Dr. Kim Sayers (Chloë Sevigny). Battles over class, race, prestige and power simmer beneath every exchange, turning academic life into a charged warzone.

Julia Roberts Finds a Darker, Sharper Edge
Roberts plays Alma with a precision that feels both familiar and startling. Guadagnino taps into her classic screen presence but pushes her into thornier territory — a woman who is brilliant, brittle and difficult to pin down.
Roberts has said even she could not decide whether she liked Alma. That tension shows on screen. Every line feels loaded. Every reaction invites questions. Alma is flawed, magnetic and unpredictable, and Roberts embraces those jagged edges with rare ferocity.

Julia Roberts and Luca Guadagnino.
A Collaboration Born From Chance
Guadagnino first met Roberts at a quiet corner of a glamorous Hollywood gathering. They talked for hours. That conversation eventually led to rehearsals at Roberts’ San Francisco home, where she cooked for the cast and turned the sessions into warm, intimate workshops. Their friendship continues today, long after filming wrapped.
A Thriller That Reflects the Tension of Our Times
“After the Hunt” dives straight into today’s cultural anxieties — generational misunderstandings, campus politics, social justice expectations and the lingering turbulence of #MeToo. Guadagnino builds these themes with Hitchcock-like unease. A slow, ticking metronome haunts the film, hinting at danger beneath the quiet.
And the questions the film raises refuse easy answers.
Is Alma protecting truth or protecting herself?
Is Hank a trusted friend or a manipulator?
Are younger generations hypersensitive, or simply unheard?
These conversations exploded after the Venice premiere, especially when a viral moment saw Roberts push back at a poorly framed question that excluded Ayo Edebiri — a moment that echoed the film’s themes of bias and perception.

Streaming Now on Prime Video
After a theatrical run beginning Oct. 17, “After the Hunt” is now streaming globally on Prime Video, with new releases typically dropping at 3:01 a.m. ET / 12:01 a.m. PT.
The cast includes:
- Julia Roberts as Alma Imhoff
- Ayo Edebiri as Maggie
- Andrew Garfield as Hank
- Michael Stuhlbarg as Frederik
- Chloë Sevigny as Dr. Kim Sayers
A Movie Designed to Be Argued About
For Guadagnino, the film’s value lies in the debate it creates. For Roberts, it’s a story meant to be dissected long after viewers leave the theatre — or turn off the TV.
“After the Hunt” doesn’t try to please everyone. Instead, it dares audiences to question their own biases while watching its characters wrestle with theirs.

