MovieSonic
A rejoint le janv. 2008
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Évaluations104
Note de MovieSonic
Avis98
Note de MovieSonic
I thought this was a realistic portrayal of this type of incident. The acting, writing and outcome were all kept low-key and believable.
I reckon they could have ramped up the drama a little for entertainment value but it kept me engaged throughout.
There could also have been much more character development to understand everybody's motives and maybe keep us guessing a little longer about who did what wrong. Why was the mother-in-law so vindictive, for example? Why was one of the employees so resentful and retaliatory and yet, there was no real consequence to her?
Perhaps they should have pushed the legal drama side much more? Really focused on the courtroom drama. I'd be interested to understand why the judge and lawyers seemed to be still accusing the defendant of caring more about money, when her own resentful employee insisted that she regularly worked for free. Bit odd.
Anyway: I love a realistic film that gives you something to think about and debate.
7/10.
I reckon they could have ramped up the drama a little for entertainment value but it kept me engaged throughout.
There could also have been much more character development to understand everybody's motives and maybe keep us guessing a little longer about who did what wrong. Why was the mother-in-law so vindictive, for example? Why was one of the employees so resentful and retaliatory and yet, there was no real consequence to her?
Perhaps they should have pushed the legal drama side much more? Really focused on the courtroom drama. I'd be interested to understand why the judge and lawyers seemed to be still accusing the defendant of caring more about money, when her own resentful employee insisted that she regularly worked for free. Bit odd.
Anyway: I love a realistic film that gives you something to think about and debate.
7/10.
I loved it. I haven't laughed like that in ages. Some of Jack's retorts are painful-cringe-funny. Especially when he insults Rachael Harris' character (Dr. Lois Schmieckel-Turner). At one point, I was screaming at my screen "just elbow her in the face". Speaking on behalf of all sensible women: we would have forgiven you.
You know Burr is quoting from life with a lot of these interactions, and he's right to highlight the absurdity of some behaviours, but I absolutely loved that he also showed the progress we've made as a society.
When the men are having their toxic conversations in the car and Travis (Justin Miles) breezily and confidently calls the friends out for it, I was very happy because media is a great way to normalise these types of conversations between men. I also liked that Jack pointed out it was a private conversation and people are entitled to privacy.
There was never a lull, I didn't feel the need to check my phone, and the pace was sharp. I actually forgot I was watching Bill Burr after only a few scenes. He's a genuinely good actor and fit in very well with the rest of the cast. They all had great chemistry as friends - Mike and Connor (Bokeem Woodbine and Bobby Cannavale) were the perfect combination with Jack (Burr). Mike in particular did some fine acting as a man having a bit of a mental breakdown, and Bobby has perfect comedic timing, as always. Absolute natural.
Justin Miles as Travis gets two of some of the most memorable laugh out loud scenes: one with Mike (Woodbine) in the car. Genuinely think I startled my neighbours with my cackling at that scene.
Other mentions are the actresses portraying Leah, Britney and Cara (Katie Aselton, Reign Edwards, Jackie Tohn). It makes all the difference when your actors can.. erm.. act(!) I really felt Leah's frustration and empathised with her even through just a handful of scenes. Britney had even less screen time (and her Beyoncé level of beauty was frankly, distracting..!) but she was effortless and likeable. Cara was hilarious!! Somehow, she was written to be infuriating and endearing simultaneously. She has a habit at the beginning that had me rooting for someone to punch her in the face!
I liked the ending. It didn't feel forced and because I follow Burr, and have watched films before, I knew what to expect. What makes this film great isn't the originality. Is that a thing anymore, anyway? It's the writing, the acting, the fact that you're invested, and the realistic outcomes. I particularly loved the very final scene(s). They summed up the film really well. I took away from this that we can all meet somewhere in the middle.
It's 9/10 for me.
You know Burr is quoting from life with a lot of these interactions, and he's right to highlight the absurdity of some behaviours, but I absolutely loved that he also showed the progress we've made as a society.
When the men are having their toxic conversations in the car and Travis (Justin Miles) breezily and confidently calls the friends out for it, I was very happy because media is a great way to normalise these types of conversations between men. I also liked that Jack pointed out it was a private conversation and people are entitled to privacy.
There was never a lull, I didn't feel the need to check my phone, and the pace was sharp. I actually forgot I was watching Bill Burr after only a few scenes. He's a genuinely good actor and fit in very well with the rest of the cast. They all had great chemistry as friends - Mike and Connor (Bokeem Woodbine and Bobby Cannavale) were the perfect combination with Jack (Burr). Mike in particular did some fine acting as a man having a bit of a mental breakdown, and Bobby has perfect comedic timing, as always. Absolute natural.
Justin Miles as Travis gets two of some of the most memorable laugh out loud scenes: one with Mike (Woodbine) in the car. Genuinely think I startled my neighbours with my cackling at that scene.
Other mentions are the actresses portraying Leah, Britney and Cara (Katie Aselton, Reign Edwards, Jackie Tohn). It makes all the difference when your actors can.. erm.. act(!) I really felt Leah's frustration and empathised with her even through just a handful of scenes. Britney had even less screen time (and her Beyoncé level of beauty was frankly, distracting..!) but she was effortless and likeable. Cara was hilarious!! Somehow, she was written to be infuriating and endearing simultaneously. She has a habit at the beginning that had me rooting for someone to punch her in the face!
I liked the ending. It didn't feel forced and because I follow Burr, and have watched films before, I knew what to expect. What makes this film great isn't the originality. Is that a thing anymore, anyway? It's the writing, the acting, the fact that you're invested, and the realistic outcomes. I particularly loved the very final scene(s). They summed up the film really well. I took away from this that we can all meet somewhere in the middle.
It's 9/10 for me.
Where to start?! I have been laughing out loud, with a wide variety of cackles, all the way through - I'm still watching now and just had to rewind because I spent about a minute choking on a laugh. So many random, what the f moments and actors contributing to the scene. I don't particularly like the character Adam Devine plays in all his films and TV shows but the writing and the slapstick is coordinated superbly so that every scene works. Poorna Jagannathan steals the entire film. She is a revelation in this. It's just one of those layered films where even while the main action is happening, something will happen or be said in the background that you weren't expecting and it sets you off laughing, but will also be why it can be repeat watched - you likely missed a lot the first time around.
Just finished the film and they even managed to make the 'resolution' scene(s) memorable and interesting. As far as I'm concerned, it's the best film in its genre in a long time.
Just finished the film and they even managed to make the 'resolution' scene(s) memorable and interesting. As far as I'm concerned, it's the best film in its genre in a long time.