Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueFollows a famous star who finds herself in a British hospital room with three other women who help her.Follows a famous star who finds herself in a British hospital room with three other women who help her.Follows a famous star who finds herself in a British hospital room with three other women who help her.
Juliette Daum
- Nurse
- (uncredited)
- …
Yvonne Edgell
- Doris
- (uncredited)
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Julia Roth (Andie MacDowell) is an older Hollywood actress struggling to make a 'comeback'. She also has colon cancer. She is getting chemotherapy at a clinic outside of London to hide from the public. She is angry to have three roommates during treatment. Mikey (Sally Phillips) is a party girl and troubled mom. Judy (Miriam Margolyes) is a chemo veteran expecting good news. Imaan (Rakhee Thakrar) is a Muslim mother. Nancy (Tamsin Greig) is Julia's fixer manager.
This starts off poorly with a stereotypical clueless entitled Hollywood actress. Andie MacDowell should ask herself if she could ever be this character in real life. Everybody knows what stage 4 means. I get the writing premise of making Julia the worst version of herself so that she can grow. It's not the best part of the movie. The best part is simply four regular women talking about their lives. The movie gets there eventually, but they keep going back to overblown writing. I don't need a baby who survived the holocaust. This movie has its problem. When it's right, it has its heart in the right place.
This starts off poorly with a stereotypical clueless entitled Hollywood actress. Andie MacDowell should ask herself if she could ever be this character in real life. Everybody knows what stage 4 means. I get the writing premise of making Julia the worst version of herself so that she can grow. It's not the best part of the movie. The best part is simply four regular women talking about their lives. The movie gets there eventually, but they keep going back to overblown writing. I don't need a baby who survived the holocaust. This movie has its problem. When it's right, it has its heart in the right place.
My Happy Ending is a film that tries to be a heartwarming and humorous story about four women who bond over their cancer treatments in a hospital. Julia (Andie MacDowell) is a famous actress who is diagnosed with breast cancer and has to deal with her fading career and cheating husband. Judy (Miriam Margolyes) is an elderly Jewish woman who has terminal lung cancer and wants to make peace with her estranged son. Mikey (Sally Phillips) is a rebellious punk rocker who has ovarian cancer and refuses to give up her lifestyle. Imaan (Rakhee Thakrar) is a young Muslim woman who has leukemia and struggles with her conservative family.
The film, directed by Tal Granit and Sharon Maymon, based on a play by Anat Gov, fails to deliver on its premise. The film is full of stereotypes, contrivances, and melodrama, without any subtlety or nuance. The film also lacks any real humor or emotion, relying on cheap jokes and sentimental music. The film does not explore the complex issues of cancer, mortality, identity, or friendship in any meaningful way.
The film's only redeeming quality is the cast, who try their best to bring some life to their characters. MacDowell, Margolyes, Phillips, and Thakrar have some chemistry and charisma on screen, but they are wasted by the poor script and direction. The supporting actors are also underused or miscast.
My Happy Ending is a film that should have been better than it was. It is a film that squanders its potential and its talent.
The film, directed by Tal Granit and Sharon Maymon, based on a play by Anat Gov, fails to deliver on its premise. The film is full of stereotypes, contrivances, and melodrama, without any subtlety or nuance. The film also lacks any real humor or emotion, relying on cheap jokes and sentimental music. The film does not explore the complex issues of cancer, mortality, identity, or friendship in any meaningful way.
The film's only redeeming quality is the cast, who try their best to bring some life to their characters. MacDowell, Margolyes, Phillips, and Thakrar have some chemistry and charisma on screen, but they are wasted by the poor script and direction. The supporting actors are also underused or miscast.
My Happy Ending is a film that should have been better than it was. It is a film that squanders its potential and its talent.
Fist off, I have leukemia and so many things in this movie really hit home. Andie MacDowell nailed the part as did the rest of the cast im my opinion. I have seem so many new patients going through the same things. When you get the diagnosis, it's like your brain can't cope with the flood of information for the first little while. AND people rush to give you THEIR opinion on what you should do. Plenty told me not to stop treatment, but quality of life is the issue and one thing I learned is that cancer can rob you of who you are unless you fight to be the person you have always been despite all the pressures of the disease et al. This is an important movie and from my experience, very real.
Cancer touches so many lives in unique ways and this film captures four individual journeys.
Told in almost real time as the events unfold Julia Roth (Andie MacDowell) arrives at a clinic to begin chemotherapy. She finds three woman in midst of their treatments. They recognise her face for her celebrity but also her pain as their own. Her rollercoaster of emotions coming to terms with the gravity of her diagnosis is understood and forgiven as they have all been there before and they welcome her with open arms to share in their coping mechanisms.
The film is beautifully shot and edited to tell a very real heartfelt story. The use of comedy is not to entertain the audience or even lift the somber mood. It is simply there because life always has its comedic moments. When things are at their worst we always try to find some humour in the situation because without it what would life be?
For me the stand out performances were from Sally Phillips and Miriam Margolyes. Rakhee Thakrar played her character so naturally she could have been a real patient on the ward.
I think this film is told in a true, respectfully representative way for the people who are daily facing cancer, without overly dramatising it. Which I think takes true skill.
Told in almost real time as the events unfold Julia Roth (Andie MacDowell) arrives at a clinic to begin chemotherapy. She finds three woman in midst of their treatments. They recognise her face for her celebrity but also her pain as their own. Her rollercoaster of emotions coming to terms with the gravity of her diagnosis is understood and forgiven as they have all been there before and they welcome her with open arms to share in their coping mechanisms.
The film is beautifully shot and edited to tell a very real heartfelt story. The use of comedy is not to entertain the audience or even lift the somber mood. It is simply there because life always has its comedic moments. When things are at their worst we always try to find some humour in the situation because without it what would life be?
For me the stand out performances were from Sally Phillips and Miriam Margolyes. Rakhee Thakrar played her character so naturally she could have been a real patient on the ward.
I think this film is told in a true, respectfully representative way for the people who are daily facing cancer, without overly dramatising it. Which I think takes true skill.
The non term "comedy drama" strikes again. And since it's being used repeatedly, I'm forced to repeat my statement: "there's no such thing as comedy drama". The drama here, as in most cases when this term is used, is indeed present. But not every time humor is used the result is comedy. In this case humor is here simply to hold the drama in check and stop the entire thing from turning into a melodramatic mush. And it works, we do get a very understated and sometimes even restrained emotional reaction in a story that the normal Hollywood treatment would turn into an overwhelming sentimental tearjerker. The fact that we have no tearjerker here is in itself an achievement.
This achievement is reached with the help of the humor used here and with superb acting of all the leads. That is, in my humble opinion, what we got here is four leads and one major supporting role. Namely, Andie MacDowell, Miriam Margolyes, Sally Phillips and Rakhee Thakrar who all get their moments on screen, and Tamsin Greig, who supports this magnificent quartet. If we consider the subject matter - keeping the entire thing from going overboard is really something special that requires a lot of control and restraint from the cast. I remember seeing other movies on this topic that failed exactly in this point. The result was next to unwatchable.
One last point: one of the previous reviewers wrote the entire movie off as a collection of cliche. The story as is, without the humor and the restraint is exactly a collection of cliche. But when this collection of cliche is presented like that it becomes something completely different. For me, it became real, and touching because of this approach.
This achievement is reached with the help of the humor used here and with superb acting of all the leads. That is, in my humble opinion, what we got here is four leads and one major supporting role. Namely, Andie MacDowell, Miriam Margolyes, Sally Phillips and Rakhee Thakrar who all get their moments on screen, and Tamsin Greig, who supports this magnificent quartet. If we consider the subject matter - keeping the entire thing from going overboard is really something special that requires a lot of control and restraint from the cast. I remember seeing other movies on this topic that failed exactly in this point. The result was next to unwatchable.
One last point: one of the previous reviewers wrote the entire movie off as a collection of cliche. The story as is, without the humor and the restraint is exactly a collection of cliche. But when this collection of cliche is presented like that it becomes something completely different. For me, it became real, and touching because of this approach.
Le saviez-vous
- GaffesAt 34:55, Judy does not mention any illiectomy and colonectomy, so her statement of shortening of her gastrointestinal tract is false.
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- How long is My Happy Ending?Propulsé par Alexa
Détails
- Date de sortie
- Pays d’origine
- Langue
- Aussi connu sous le nom de
- El final que quiero
- Lieux de tournage
- sociétés de production
- Consultez plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro
Box-office
- Budget
- 1 500 000 $ US (estimation)
- Brut – États-Unis et Canada
- 59 329 $ US
- Fin de semaine d'ouverture – États-Unis et Canada
- 26 572 $ US
- 26 févr. 2023
- Brut – à l'échelle mondiale
- 59 329 $ US
- Durée
- 1h 29m(89 min)
- Couleur
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