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IMDbPro

Please Give

  • 2010
  • R
  • 1 Std. 27 Min.
IMDb-BEWERTUNG
6,6/10
11.866
IHRE BEWERTUNG
Please Give (2010)
A Manhattan couple (Platt and Keener) find their plan to expand their apartment complicated when they bond with Andra, their elderly neighbor next door.
trailer wiedergeben2:09
10 Videos
17 Fotos
DramaKomödie

Füge eine Handlung in deiner Sprache hinzuIn New York City, a husband and wife butt heads with the granddaughters of the elderly woman who lives in the apartment the couple owns.In New York City, a husband and wife butt heads with the granddaughters of the elderly woman who lives in the apartment the couple owns.In New York City, a husband and wife butt heads with the granddaughters of the elderly woman who lives in the apartment the couple owns.

  • Regie
    • Nicole Holofcener
  • Drehbuch
    • Nicole Holofcener
  • Hauptbesetzung
    • Catherine Keener
    • Oliver Platt
    • Rebecca Hall
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
  • IMDb-BEWERTUNG
    6,6/10
    11.866
    IHRE BEWERTUNG
    • Regie
      • Nicole Holofcener
    • Drehbuch
      • Nicole Holofcener
    • Hauptbesetzung
      • Catherine Keener
      • Oliver Platt
      • Rebecca Hall
    • 58Benutzerrezensionen
    • 133Kritische Rezensionen
    • 78Metascore
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
    • Auszeichnungen
      • 5 Gewinne & 18 Nominierungen insgesamt

    Videos10

    Please Give
    Trailer 2:09
    Please Give
    Please Give (Clip 4 of 4)
    Clip 0:47
    Please Give (Clip 4 of 4)
    Please Give (Clip 4 of 4)
    Clip 0:47
    Please Give (Clip 4 of 4)
    Please Give (Clip 3 of 4)
    Clip 1:27
    Please Give (Clip 3 of 4)
    Please Give (Clip 2 of 4)
    Clip 1:05
    Please Give (Clip 2 of 4)
    Please Give (Clip 1 of 4)
    Clip 0:44
    Please Give (Clip 1 of 4)
    Please Give: Happy Birthday
    Clip 1:05
    Please Give: Happy Birthday

    Fotos17

    Poster ansehen
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    Topbesetzung45

    Ändern
    Catherine Keener
    Catherine Keener
    • Kate
    Oliver Platt
    Oliver Platt
    • Alex
    Rebecca Hall
    Rebecca Hall
    • Rebecca
    Elizabeth Keener
    Elizabeth Keener
    • Cathy
    Elise Ivy
    Elise Ivy
    • Marissa
    Josh Pais
    Josh Pais
    • Adam
    Sarah Steele
    Sarah Steele
    • Abby
    Ann Morgan Guilbert
    Ann Morgan Guilbert
    • Andra
    • (as Ann Guilbert)
    Amanda Peet
    Amanda Peet
    • Mary
    Griffin Frazen
    Griffin Frazen
    • Shopper
    Reggie Austin
    Reggie Austin
    • Shopper
    Scott Cohen
    Scott Cohen
    • Dr. Lerner
    Paul Sparks
    Paul Sparks
    • Blind Date
    Lois Smith
    Lois Smith
    • Mrs. Portman
    Thomas Ian Nicholas
    Thomas Ian Nicholas
    • Eugene
    Harmonica Sunbeam
    • Transvestite Homeless Person
    Amy Wright
    Amy Wright
    • Erin
    Arthur French
    • Man Waiting for a Table
    • Regie
      • Nicole Holofcener
    • Drehbuch
      • Nicole Holofcener
    • Komplette Besetzung und alle Crew-Mitglieder
    • Produktion, Einspielergebnisse & mehr bei IMDbPro

    Benutzerrezensionen58

    6,611.8K
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    Empfohlene Bewertungen

    7ferguson-6

    Ghosts of Furniture Past

    Greetings again from the darkness. If not for a friend's recommendation, I probably would have avoided this one on the basis of writer/director Nicole Holofcener's last film, Friends with Money. I found that to be a miserable film filled with miserable people. This one, on the other hand, is a wonderful film filled with miserable people!

    OK, that is a slight simplification, but it is an extremely well written story that showcases the imperfections of people, social situations and society as a whole. Sometimes it seems the harder we try, the worse things turn out. Such is the life of Catherine Keener's character. She and her husband (Oliver Platt) run a furniture resale shop. She carries this enormous burden around because they stock the store by buying cheap from grandchildren stuck with death's aftermath ... and then reselling to arrogant metrosexual types who live for kitsch and cool. Keener spends her time trying to scrape off the guilt by doling out money and doggie bags to the homeless.

    There are many interesting characters in the film and this always adds to the fun. Rebecca Hall (uptight Vicky from Vicky Cristina Barcelona) plays the dutiful granddaughter taking care of her 90 plus year old monster granny played colorfully by Ann Morgan Guilbert. Many will remember Ms. Guilbert as Dick Van Dyke's neighbor in the early 60's sitcom. Her key job in the film is to get closer to dying so that Keener and Platt can take over her apartment and expand - the ultimate dream for a NYC resident. Hall's character is the budded flower - the one just waiting to bloom as soon as the rain hits (granny dies).

    The mean-spiritedness of the grandmother is matched only by the vile spewing from Amanda Peet, Hall's less than caring and trustworthy sister who is obsessed with tanning ... and the girl who "stole" her boyfriend. Peet's character often just says what she is thinking which adds dimension to most conversations! There are some terrific scenes and moments and characters in the film, but the best written scene is the dinner party. Keener and Platt invite Hall, Peet and Guilbert over in an guilt-easing attempt to be civil while waiting for Granny to kick the bucket. The scene takes on an entirely new life when Keener/Platt's daughter makes an appearance. Sarah Steele plays Abby as a smart, insightful teenager. Oh, and she is also mad at the world and bitter about her complexion and slightly pudgy build (which makes finding the right jeans a quest). The whole scene is one uncomfortable statement or moment after another. Beautiful to watch.

    I could go on and on about the intricacies of the characters and their relationships with each other and outsiders, but what matters is that the film is well written and well executed. It is not some sappy, save the world rom-com, but rather a character study of what goes on in real life and in real moments. Plenty of humor, but also plenty of truth. Amazing how often those two go hand in hand.
    9Red-125

    A very New York City kind of movie

    Please Give (2010) was written and directed by Nicole Holofcener. It's a very New York City kind of movie. The plot revolves around the purchase of an apartment by two urban professionals. (They're not that young, so they're not yuppies, although they probably were yuppies in their day.) At present, they make an apparently excellent living buying up old "classic" furniture, and reselling it in their storeroom. Catherine Keener plays Kate, the wife, and Oliver Platt is her husband Alex.

    The problem with the purchase of the apartment is that it's still occupied by an older woman, and the agreement is that she will live there until she dies. Into the mix come the woman's two granddaughters--Rebecca Hall as Rebecca, the "plain" sister, and Amanda Peet as Mary, the gorgeous sister. (Rebecca Hall is only plain by Hollywood standards, and Amanda Peet is gorgeous by those same standards.)

    The film has several plot threads moving forward simultaneously, but the one that interested me the most was Kate's ambivalence about her source of income. Obviously, if you're selling any used furniture--classic or otherwise--you have to buy low and sell high. However, Kate is clearly guilt-ridden about making money because she knows furniture value and the sellers--usually children of a recently deceased parent--don't know these values.

    She also feels guilty about street people, and tends to give them ten- or twenty-dollar bills as she walks along the street. She really wants to help disadvantaged people, and checks out a residence for the frail elderly and a day program for developmentally disabled people to see if she can volunteer.

    Catherine Keener is an appealing actor, and her character is basically likable. However, as I thought about it, Kate's guilt doesn't lead to any really effective action. Yes, she agonizes about the furniture, but she buys and sells it anyway. And, although her motivation to help the less fortunate is clear, she doesn't actually accept the volunteer positions. She thinks about them, and she cries, but she doesn't really do anything. Still, you can't deny the honesty of her emotions.

    This is a movie in which, objectively, nothing truly major happens. However, the characters are changed by the events in the film. They are imperfect and they don't become perfect, but they're interesting and you care about them.

    As I wrote at the beginning of the review, this is a very New York City kind of movie. It crackles with realistic NYC atmosphere, and you get a real sense of the city. I could almost feel myself walking along the sidewalk with Kate or Alex.

    All in all, I think this is definitely a film worth seeing, and it will work well on DVD. My guess is that opinions about this movie will vary tremendously. I liked it, but others may have equally compelling reasons to dislike it. See it yourself and make your own decision.
    7Chris Knipp

    Dead people's stuff

    Nicole Holofcener is sort of an auteur, and accordingly has a following: she writes and directs her own films in pretty much her own way. She's a witty observer of current American customs and she's good with actors. She gets especially nice performances out of Catherine Keener, who seems too often relegated by other directors to secondary roles in their films but whom she features in all four of hers. These do sometimes have a TV flavor. Holofcener in fact has directed episodes of "Sex and the City," "Six Feet Under," and other shows. Like a TV comedy writer, she works in short scenes with moments of pointed dialogue, a specific observation -- a twisted toe, a misshapen breast, a nasty crack. Eventually there's a bit of resolution.

    In her last film, the 2006 'Friends with Money,' Holofcener manipulated a set of women ("Sex and the City" style) with different marital circumstances and levels of wealth.

    This time unity of a sort is provided by a New York apartment building where the main people meet. There is just one (pretty) happily married couple, Alex and Kate (Oliver Platt and Keener), and a very blunt old lady who lives next door, Andra (Ann Morgan Guilbert), whose apartment they have purchased. Alex and Kate have a quarrelsome teenage daughter, Abby (Sarah Steele), who's not happy with her complexion or her wardrobe. She wants a pair of jeans that costs two hundred dollars.

    The old lady has two granddaughters, one of whom is mean and selfish, the other kindlier and shier.

    "Please give" alludes to panhandlers, but also more widely to Kate's guilt. She is self-conscious about the fact that her business with Alex earns good money and that they are financially secure. She longs to do charitable work, though she runs crying from a center for the mentally handicapped, and her generous handouts to the homeless people on the block only seem to anger Abby. Abby thinks the money should go toward her expensive jeans. She isn't a very high minded or even pleasant young lady. But she's gong through a difficult age. So is Andra, who is infirm and in her nineties and probably not going to last long. Andra's older granddaughter Mary (a well-disguised Amanda Peet), an artificially bronzed woman who gives facials at a spa, has no such excuse. Mary is the mean and selfish sister. Her more shy and more dutiful sibling, Rebecca (Rebecca Hall), does mammograms; would like a boyfriend; but drops by every day to help out her grumpy old grandmother. Guilt, self-centeredness, death, and adultery are going to rear their heads eventually. Whenever Alex or Kate see Rebecca they feel guilty because Rebecca is trying to make Andra's latter days comfortable, but Alex and Kate are just waiting for her to die so they can enlarge their apartment. This is the kind of thing Mary is only too happy to make clear to Andra, as she gets to do when, out of guilt, Kate invites the grandmother and both granddaughters to dinner. This leads to some of the movie's most deliciously uncomfortable dialogue or, if you see it that way, offensive, nasty talk. For Alex what is said doesn't matter much because he is noticing Mary. She's beautiful.

    It's ingenious the way Holofcener weaves her themes in and out of scenes; but she also hits the themes too hard. It's a bit obvious how customers in Kate and Alex's Fifties ("Mid-Century") furniture shop suddenly start asking where they get their merchandise. We know the answer, and Alex answers without guilt: they buy them from the children of dead people. But Kate has to go around looking for a charitable organization to donate time to. What she ends up doing, it seems, is giving expensive jeans to Abby. And if Abby's face still has blemishes, it's brightened by her smile when she receives this bounty. The inevitable happens and Andra dies, resulting in a moment when Rebecca and Mary lie quietly and cuddle. Alex has had a roving eye, but he and Kate are one of Holofcener's happy couples. Much drolly specific and tartly rude dialogue has gone by.

    But is that enough? I might tend to agree with Variety's Todd McCarthy, who wrote in a review of 'Lovely and Amazing,' that it was "Engaging, intermittently insightful but too glib to wring full value out of its subject matter." One wishes she would take something a little more seriously, go into a little more depth, scatter around her focus a little less. And if the nasty talk and mean people she chronicles don't really matter, she ought to let them drift free into out-and-out farce; or if they do matter, she ought to give them a harder time.

    But that is not her way. What she gives us is a keen ear for dialogue, good roles for women, and an even-handed distribution of likable and despicable characters. 'Please Give' made me laugh out loud, especially in the first half. Then the nastiness, first of Abby, then of Andra, finally of Mary, began to add up and the action stopped being fun. Then as dialogue and incidents came to seem too calculated to be convincing, relationships and outcomes became in turn harder and harder to make any ultimate sense of.

    This weakness may have developed, oddly enough, out of a greater focus. In the earliest of Holofcener's films that I've seen, the 2001 'Lovely and Amazing,' there is a collection of intrigues, on the face of them perhaps wildly unconnected, that made it fun to see what was going to happen next. This time there are no surprises, only outcomes that are anticlimactic and sentimental. Cuddling with a bitch sister: somehow that was not what I wanted.
    9lee_eisenberg

    definitely a good one

    Nicole Holofcener and Catherine Keener mark their fourth collaboration* with "Please Give", showing the contrasts in a New York couple's life. Kate (Keener) and Alex (Oliver Platt) run a furniture shop selling objects that they have collected at estate sales. In the apartment next to theirs, elderly Andra (Ann Guilbert, better known as Millie on "The Dick Van Dyke Show") has moved in with her granddaughters, the benevolent Rebecca (Rebecca Hall) and the mean-spirited Mary (Amanda Peet). As Kate, Alex, and their daughter Abby (Sarah Steele) get to know Andra, Rebecca and Mary, Kate begins to have doubts about how her own family lives its life. Kate always makes an effort to give money to the homeless, while Sarah doesn't seem to appreciate everything that she has.

    The movie does a great job with character development. From the start, we immediately know that Andra always says exactly what she thinks, and that Mary doesn't have a care in the world. Specifically, there's the dichotomy in Kate's attitude towards things: she does everything possible to be a good Samaritan, but eagerly awaits Andra's passing. Is Kate really the person who she sees herself as? All in all, I highly recommend "Please Give". It just might help you realize your own flaws. Also starring Kevin Corrigan and Thomas Ian Nichols.

    *I actually haven't seen any of Holofcener's other movies. I guess that I'll have to.
    8secondtake

    You might want "more" in a story, but this is so well made, funny, and moving, it's more than enough

    Please Give (2010)

    A sharp, witty, touching, slice-of-life gem of a movie directed by Nicole Holofcener. It has some of the trappings of an Indie movie, with very ordinary people taking the leads and quirky low budget filming and music to make it undramatic.

    But the cast is top notch. The leads--there are four of them in a well balanced ensemble--are nothing if not believable. Maybe most impressive as an actress is Rebecca Hall, who played Vicky in "Vicky, Christina, Barcelona," completely transforming herself into an awkward, kindly, thoughtful and slightly whining young woman. Playing her sister is a hardened and unlikable Amanda Peet, who also has a Woody Allen feather in her cap, "Melinda, Melinda."

    Then there is a moderne era antique store couple, Catherine Keener (a regular in the director's films) and Oliver Platt, a comfortable couple who buy their antiques people who have just had a relative with an apartment full of stuff die. Yes, there is some black humor, hilarious stuff, and there are layers of contemporary New York life with its superficial and materialist angst, and charm. As events compound, usually with conviction, the characters become more rounded and intriguing. And sympathetic. By the end, you feel for everyone, whatever their weird and sometimes selfish cores.

    If the movie seems like a cross between Sex and the City and Six Feet Under, it's not a surprise--Holofcener has directed episodes from both series. Throw in her early apprenticeship under Woody Allen, and you get the humor as well as the high standards of writing and directing, combined, that Allen inspires. "Please Give" is slight, somehow, in its intentions. It takes a view of life that isn't so strange really, and where nothing all that unusual happens--the weirdness is just a reminder that we all have weirdness in our lives--and it makes it salient. That's the magic overall, lifting everyday traits into the light where they matter. Or matter differently. With a laugh.

    Don't miss it!

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    Handlung

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    • Wissenswertes
      Kate is shown reading a book, 'Assassination Vacation', by Sarah Vowell. That author appears in a brief but credited role as a shopper. The actress playing Kate, Catherine Keener, is also a featured voice in the audio book of 'Assassination Vacation'.
    • Patzer
      When they take a car trip to see the autumn leaves, the green screen of the vistas is low quality, and the leaves outside the car windows on the trip are summer green.
    • Zitate

      Kate: You're a really good person.

    • Verbindungen
      Featured in Siskel & Ebert & the Movies: The Losers/The Back-Up Plan/You Don't Know Jack/Oceans/Exit Through the Gift Shop/Death at a Funeral (2010)
    • Soundtracks
      No Shoes
      by The Roches

      Lyrics by Paranoid Larry

      Music by Paranoid Larry, Neil Murphy and Joe Shapiro

      Courtesy of 429 records

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    FAQ

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    Details

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    • Erscheinungsdatum
      • 8. Juli 2010 (Deutschland)
    • Herkunftsland
      • Vereinigte Staaten
    • Offizieller Standort
      • Sony Pictures Classics (United States)
    • Sprache
      • Englisch
    • Auch bekannt als
      • Feelin' Guilty
    • Drehorte
      • New York City, New York, USA(skintology spa)
    • Produktionsfirmen
      • Sony Pictures Classics
      • Likely Story
      • Feelin' Guilty
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    Box Office

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    • Budget
      • 3.000.000 $ (geschätzt)
    • Bruttoertrag in den USA und Kanada
      • 4.033.574 $
    • Eröffnungswochenende in den USA und in Kanada
      • 118.123 $
      • 2. Mai 2010
    • Weltweiter Bruttoertrag
      • 4.313.829 $
    Weitere Informationen zur Box Office finden Sie auf IMDbPro.

    Technische Daten

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    • Laufzeit
      1 Stunde 27 Minuten
    • Farbe
      • Color
    • Sound-Mix
      • Dolby Digital
      • SDDS
      • DTS
    • Seitenverhältnis
      • 2.35 : 1

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