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An deiner Schulter

Originaltitel: The Upside of Anger
  • 2005
  • 12
  • 1 Std. 58 Min.
IMDb-BEWERTUNG
6,8/10
23.795
IHRE BEWERTUNG
Kevin Costner, Joan Allen, Alicia Witt, Keri Russell, Erika Christensen, and Evan Rachel Wood in An deiner Schulter (2005)
Theatrical Trailer from New Line Cinema
trailer wiedergeben2:13
14 Videos
99+ Fotos
Schwarze KomödieDramaKomödie

Als ihr Mann unerwartet verschwindet, jonglieren eine scharfsinnige Vorstadtfrau und ihre Töchter mit den romantischen Dilemmata und der Familiendynamik ihrer Mutter.Als ihr Mann unerwartet verschwindet, jonglieren eine scharfsinnige Vorstadtfrau und ihre Töchter mit den romantischen Dilemmata und der Familiendynamik ihrer Mutter.Als ihr Mann unerwartet verschwindet, jonglieren eine scharfsinnige Vorstadtfrau und ihre Töchter mit den romantischen Dilemmata und der Familiendynamik ihrer Mutter.

  • Regie
    • Mike Binder
  • Drehbuch
    • Mike Binder
  • Hauptbesetzung
    • Joan Allen
    • Kevin Costner
    • Erika Christensen
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
  • IMDb-BEWERTUNG
    6,8/10
    23.795
    IHRE BEWERTUNG
    • Regie
      • Mike Binder
    • Drehbuch
      • Mike Binder
    • Hauptbesetzung
      • Joan Allen
      • Kevin Costner
      • Erika Christensen
    • 235Benutzerrezensionen
    • 101Kritische Rezensionen
    • 63Metascore
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
    • Auszeichnungen
      • 5 Gewinne & 13 Nominierungen insgesamt

    Videos14

    The Upside of Anger
    Trailer 2:13
    The Upside of Anger
    The Upside of Anger
    Trailer 2:13
    The Upside of Anger
    The Upside of Anger
    Trailer 2:13
    The Upside of Anger
    The Upside Of Anger Scene: Heals
    Clip 1:02
    The Upside Of Anger Scene: Heals
    The Upside Of Anger Scene: That Was Weird
    Clip 0:47
    The Upside Of Anger Scene: That Was Weird
    The Upside Of Anger Scene: A Beautiful Bride
    Clip 0:58
    The Upside Of Anger Scene: A Beautiful Bride
    The Upside Of Anger Scene: Your Story
    Clip 1:00
    The Upside Of Anger Scene: Your Story

    Fotos101

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    Topbesetzung44

    Ändern
    Joan Allen
    Joan Allen
    • Terry Wolfmeyer
    Kevin Costner
    Kevin Costner
    • Denny Davies
    Erika Christensen
    Erika Christensen
    • Andy Wolfmeyer
    Evan Rachel Wood
    Evan Rachel Wood
    • Popeye Wolfmeyer
    Keri Russell
    Keri Russell
    • Emily Wolfmeyer
    Alicia Witt
    Alicia Witt
    • Hadley Wolfmeyer
    Mike Binder
    Mike Binder
    • Adam 'Shep' Goodman
    Tom Harper
    Tom Harper
    • David Junior
    Dane Christensen
    Dane Christensen
    • Gorden Reiner
    Danny Webb
    Danny Webb
    • Grey Wolfmeyer
    Magdalena Manville
    • Darlene
    Suzanne Bertish
    Suzanne Bertish
    • Gina
    David Firth
    • David Senior
    Rod Woodruff
    • Dean Reiner
    • (as Roderick P. Woodruff)
    Stephen Greif
    Stephen Greif
    • Emily's Doctor
    Arthur Penhallow
    Arthur Penhallow
    • Arthur Penhallow
    Richard Mylan
    • Disc Jockey
    Robert Perkins
    • Town Car Man
    • Regie
      • Mike Binder
    • Drehbuch
      • Mike Binder
    • Komplette Besetzung und alle Crew-Mitglieder
    • Produktion, Einspielergebnisse & mehr bei IMDbPro

    Benutzerrezensionen235

    6,823.7K
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    Empfohlene Bewertungen

    8anhedonia

    The Joan Allen Show - highly recommended!

    "The Upside of Anger" showcases many good performances but make no mistake about it, this movie's clearly the Joan Allen Show. And what a show she puts on.

    About an hour into the film, Allen's Terry Wolfmeyer bursts into a room unannounced. Her reaction lasts just a few seconds, but they're priceless. Writer-director Mike Binder keeps the camera on Allen and what we get is a moment of sheer brilliance, one that should be shown to all acting students.

    Binder does something awfully bold in this film. He lets his story revolve around two seemingly unlikable people - Terry and her neighbor, Danny Davies (Kevin Costner). They're two self-destructive, terribly selfish, occasionally boorish people who wallow in their own pity. Terry's furious and hurt because her husband left her for his Swedish secretary, while Danny's a former Detroit Tiger who now spends signing baseball memorabilia and running a radio talk show where he refuses to talk baseball.

    They find solace in each other, not because they particularly like each other, but because they each need a drinking buddy. But thanks to two very fine performances, they're likable.

    Much to Binder's credit, he doesn't simply settle his story on Terry and Danny. Wisely, Binder lets his story take its time. We get to know Terry's children, too. There's Andy (Erika Christensen), who's dating an older lech Shep (Binder); Popeye (Evan Rachel Wood), the youngest and budding filmmaker; Emily (Keri Russell), who feels unloved; and rebellious Hadley (Alicia Witt). These young women have their own personalities and spending time with them makes the story richer.

    Costner is awfully comfortable playing Danny. In fact, Danny is Crash Davis, slightly older and a bit more cynical. Danny doesn't like clinging to his baseball past, but he knows that's all he's got. It's nice to see Costner in these roles. He plays them better than most and it's a loose, relaxed performance that never goes over the top.

    But the movie really is all about Allen. It's tough turning a self-destructive and pitiful alcoholic into someone we want to spend time with. But Allen simply sparkles in the role. She's smart, quick-witted and fraying at the edges, trying to keep her wits about her. We not only understand her roller-coaster emotions, but also find them believable. Performances like hers are truly rare and Allen does nothing wrong here.

    Had this film been released last year, Hilary Swank might very well not have walked away with her second Academy Award. Not only does Allen deserve a nomination for her remarkable performance in this film, she also probably deserves to win it.

    What surprising about Binder's story is that despite all its warmth and humor, there's still a very nice and unexpectedly dark edge to it all. It's refreshing to see a film where the characters and the situations aren't exactly all that rosy. And even moments that could have easily been played for their melodrama are brilliantly underplayed and toned down. They work much better this way, than having characters resort to histrionics.

    The film's voice-over narration, on the other hand, gets a bit preachy. And a revelation at the end is a bit questionable. Astute viewers would figure it out because that's really the only rational way to deal with it. Binder sort of lets us in on it very early on in the film.

    We never get to see the title's real meaning in this film. That, presumably, comes after the end credits and all these characters get on with their lives. Nevertheless, "The Upside of Anger" is a good film studded with a great performance by one of today's finest actresses.
    7ArizWldcat

    Drama with some laughs and a twist

    I saw this when it premiered at the Sundance film festival (although the director & actors didn't bother to come to our screening), and I enjoyed it. Kevin Costner plays a baseball player, but the movie is not about baseball; it deals with the anger the lead character feels when her husband disappears, along with his secretary. Joan Allen plays the wife of the missing man, and is the mother to four daughters, played very well by Evan Rachel Wood, Keri Russel, Erika Christensen, and Alicia Witt. Joan Allen was marvelous. We laughed many times when she glared in anger at different characters in the movie (and we were glad she wasn't mad at US! LOL...) I have not been a big fan of Kevin Costner in recent years, but thought that he did a great job as the man who helps Joan Allen's character pick up the pieces. The writer/director also has a role in the film as an older man who dates Joan Allen's daughter. I thought the message of the film was delivered well, and it was an entertaining story. There is a twist at the end that I truly did not see coming. I don't think it spoiled the movie, it was just unexpected.
    7ryanIRISHIII

    The Upside of Anger

    I had no idea of the plot other than Kevin Costner was a retired baseball player who drank and smoked weed. I would see just about anything with Kevin in it. It seems to me that the director was trying to put too many different facets of emotion in the film... abandonment, grieve, anger, despair, self pity, humor, hatred, cynicism. As a divorced mother of six, some of the lines "hit too close to home" so that tells me that the essence of the pain was captured. I am still thinking about the ending which really surprised me. I can't even begin to imagine how a wife who felt as she did could handle that. All in all it was a good movie, and I recommend it to anyone who has lost control of their anger in trying to deal with disappointment and resentment.
    10jhclues

    An Upside to This Year's Movies

    Life doesn't come with an instruction manual or a script to follow, it's basically improv on a daily basis, and as it plays out people and things often are not who or what they seem to be on the surface. It's reality, as opposed to the way you expect, hope or want it all to be; truth, as opposed to an individual perception of truth. That's life. And "The Upside of Anger," written and directed by Mike Binder, explores some hard realities that differ drastically from expectations and perceptions.

    The film opens with a funeral, a somber note which in a sense prepares you for what is to follow, after a flash back of three years, at which point the story begins. Terry Wolfmeyer (Joan Allen) is at loose ends because her husband has run off with his secretary, leaving her and four daughters behind to fend for themselves. Angry, distraught and a stone's throw from bitter, Terry turns to alcohol to deaden the effects of what has been a life-altering experience. Luckily-- or maybe not-- Terry has a neighbor, Denny Davies (Kevin Costner), an ex-pro baseball player turned radio talk show host, with whom to share a drink and commiserate. Her daughters (three teens and one in college) are supportive, as well-- to a point. But they are each in their own way also struggling to understand why their father deserted them. By all accounts, this was in no way a dysfunctional, angst-ridden family, so the actions of their father is a mystery to them all. Naturally, it's a pivotal point in their lives, and before any of them can move on, especially Terry, they have to know why he did what he did. In the meantime, with or without this needed closure, life is happening to and around them.

    Binder (who also appears in the film as the producer of Denny's radio show) displays an astute knowledge of human nature with this film, and how random the myriad twists and turns of life can be. He holds your attention from the opening scene (who's funeral is it, anyway?), and just when you think you know where the story is going it takes an unexpected turn. And he is in no way attempting to manipulate his audience; rather, he is giving you a reflection of the way life so often simply does not go the way you think it's going to. It's a succinct look at relationships, and of how fragile-- as well as resilient-- we all can be.

    As Terry, Joan Allen sets vanity aside to create her character and turns in an Oscar caliber performance in doing so. When she gets up in the morning she looks like a middle-aged woman with insufferable problems and a hangover, a woman in the throes of coping with a traumatic experience who is desperate to reconnect with a life she no longer has and who will do anything within her power to hang on to what she has left. She's walking a tightrope over a deep abyss and she's understandably on edge, so when one of her girls tugs the rope and compromises her control and security, she quite naturally lashes out, proving the old adage you always hurt the one you love. There's a scene in which a grieving Terry draws her hands to her breast and, head lowered, utters a cry, and anyone who has ever known any kind of grief or loss in their life will at that moment know exactly what she is going through. It's a terrific piece of acting, a performance that is altogether affecting and memorable.

    And, as performances go, Kevin Costner, too, puts vanity aside to create a character that is entirely convincing. Denny Davies is paunchy, his hair is thin and most of the time he looks as though he's had one beer too many. Still, he's engaging, and you get the feeling there's a complex individual hiding behind an external simplicity that perhaps helps to mask his true feelings about a lot of things in his life, including his career on the diamond. Why, for example, does he refuse to talk about baseball on his sports talk show? In it's purity, this is arguably Costner's finest performance ever.

    Top notch performances are turned in, as well, by Erika Christensen, Evan Rachel Wood, Keri Russell and Alicia Witt as Terry's daughters, respectively, Andy, Popeye, Emily and Hadley; and by Binder himself as Shep. In the end, "The Upside of Anger" is an involving, memorable film that celebrates life and leaves you with a sense of hope, that no matter how bad things get we all have the capacity to get through it and somehow find the light at the end of the tunnel. And that's the magic of the movies.
    7deadclowncollege

    There's more than one upside to the Upside of Anger

    For some, The Upside of Anger will be little more than a beep under the radar. I guess part of the blame belongs to New Line Cinema's marketing campaign. With the prolific cast on board this doesn't seem too hard of a task (Or has Kevin Costner still not been forgiven for Waterworld?). Anyways, for those who do have the chance of seeing the film, they might find themselves enjoying the low-key romantic comedy. It's rather surprising a man directed The Upside of Anger, as it is more than anything else about female companionship. Director Mike Binder's look at these five women ranges from the ordinary (a character who has the ridiculous notion she's repulsive and fat) to the confusing (an utterly confounding where the women start laughing while a guy sits as oblivious as me). In a way, I feel like Kevin Costner's character- not always fully comprehending, yet oddly compelled.

    Joan Allen plays Terry, a mother who suspects her husband is fooling around with a perky Swedish secretary. She finds comfort in the company of a retired baseball player (Kevin Costner) that she drinks with. It doesn't take too long for their relationship to turn physical and then something deeper yet. Terry has four daughters. The eldest (Alicia Witt) wants nothing more than to distance herself from Terry after college. Emily (Keri Russell) is a dancer workaholic who Terry is worried doesn't eat enough. Andy (Erika Christensen) is hired as a production assistant by the lowlife producer of Costner's radio show. And the youngest Popeye (Evan Rachel Wood) has a crush on a new kid.

    Although it doesn't stray too far from the conventions of the genre, the film does try new things. Perhaps most notably, the Upside of Anger is a romantic comedy where the two characters rolling in the sheets (so to speak) aren't two attractive twenty-year olds. Also, while Terry and her daughters share a close relationship, they're rarely confidantes. A number of times they aren't even friendly to each other.

    Also, Mike Binder effectively underplays the film. Something as mundane as a character slurping soup becomes an exercise in tense feelings. And the underplayed and relaxed nature helps draw attention to the performances. Kevin Costner's character could be imagined as the character in Bull Durham or Field of Dreams once the magic has gone. Although he's a drunk slob, he is also a kind and likable guy. All four daughters (particularly Evan Rachel Wood) give good performances. This movie however belongs to Joan Allen. Somewhat paradoxically with the film's underlying message, Allen's best scenes often draw from anger. In one scene, she catches Andy in bed with the producer and unable to say anything, she huffs off in Olympian fury.

    For most of its one-hundred-thirty-five minute length, The Upside of Anger is a pleasant romantic comedy with something to say.

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    Handlung

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    • Wissenswertes
      Lauren Ambrose changed her mind about playing the role of the daughter whose obsession with dance and dieting almost kills her. Keri Russell soon took on the role. Russell had studied classical dance when she was younger. She said she just needed some catch-up classes.
    • Patzer
      The State of Michigan eliminated the requirement for all cars to have front license plates in 1974, which still stands to this day. All of the modern cars in this movie have front and rear license plates.
    • Zitate

      Lavender "Popeye" Wolfmeyer: People don't know how to love. They bite rather than kiss. They slap rather than stroke. Maybe it's because they recognize how easy it is for love to go bad, to become suddenly impossible... unworkable, an exercise of futility. So they avoid it and seek solace in angst, and fear, and aggression, which are always there and readily available. Or maybe sometimes... they just don't have all the facts.

    • Verbindungen
      Featured in HBO First Look: The Upside of Anger (2005)
    • Soundtracks
      Rebel Yell
      Performed by Billy Idol

      Words and Music by Billy Idol / Steve Stevens

      Licensed courtesy of EMI Records Ltd.

      (c) 1984 Boneidol Music/Chrysalis Music Inc/WB Music Corp/Rare Blue Music

      By kind permission of Warner Chappell Music Limited/Chrysalis Music Inc

    Top-Auswahl

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    Details

    Ändern
    • Erscheinungsdatum
      • 7. Juli 2005 (Deutschland)
    • Herkunftsländer
      • Vereinigte Staaten
      • Deutschland
      • Vereinigtes Königreich
    • Sprache
      • Englisch
    • Auch bekannt als
      • Adorablemente Enojada
    • Drehorte
      • WRIF-FM Radio Station - 1 Radio Plaza Road, Detroit, Michigan, USA
    • Produktionsfirmen
      • New Line Cinema
      • Media 8 Entertainment
      • VIP 2 Medienfonds
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    Box Office

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    • Budget
      • 12.000.000 $ (geschätzt)
    • Bruttoertrag in den USA und Kanada
      • 18.761.993 $
    • Eröffnungswochenende in den USA und in Kanada
      • 211.559 $
      • 13. März 2005
    • Weltweiter Bruttoertrag
      • 28.237.488 $
    Weitere Informationen zur Box Office finden Sie auf IMDbPro.

    Technische Daten

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    • Laufzeit
      • 1 Std. 58 Min.(118 min)
    • Farbe
      • Color
    • Sound-Mix
      • DTS
      • Dolby Digital
      • SDDS
    • Seitenverhältnis
      • 2.35 : 1

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