In Yorgos Lanthimos’ Bugonia, his fifth film with Emma Stone, the trademark macabre, madcap cheekiness gets swapped for something disappointingly milder. Save for few final all-out flings, Lanthimos keeps it reined in. There are stabs here too at acidic irony but it’s doused within a banal vocabulary. Everything is pitched at a comparatively lower key than the familiar, despite simmering unease. On all counts, Bugonia feels like a slight entry—something made in a scurry before a massive leap. At worst, it’s slapdash, overly reliant on a formidable Stone and a precisely variegated Plemons, both lugging it forth with electric synergy. Stone essays a pharmaceutical company CEO, Michelle Fuller, who gets kidnapped by Teddy (Jesse Plemons) and his autistic cousin, Donny (Aidan Delbis). The mastermind, Teddy works a menial job for Michelle’s company and has spent too much time fiddling with conspiracy theories online instead of tackling long-festering trauma.