सिल्विया एक सामाजिक कार्यकर्ता हैं जो एक सरल और संरचित जिंदगी जीती हैं, इसका खुलासा तब हुआ जब शाऊल अपने हाई स्कूल पुनर्मिलन से उसके घर आया, उनकी अचानक हुई मुलाकात उन दोनों पर गहरा प्रभाव डाल... सभी पढ़ेंसिल्विया एक सामाजिक कार्यकर्ता हैं जो एक सरल और संरचित जिंदगी जीती हैं, इसका खुलासा तब हुआ जब शाऊल अपने हाई स्कूल पुनर्मिलन से उसके घर आया, उनकी अचानक हुई मुलाकात उन दोनों पर गहरा प्रभाव डालेगी क्योंकि वे लोग अतीत का दरवाजा खोलेंगे.सिल्विया एक सामाजिक कार्यकर्ता हैं जो एक सरल और संरचित जिंदगी जीती हैं, इसका खुलासा तब हुआ जब शाऊल अपने हाई स्कूल पुनर्मिलन से उसके घर आया, उनकी अचानक हुई मुलाकात उन दोनों पर गहरा प्रभाव डालेगी क्योंकि वे लोग अतीत का दरवाजा खोलेंगे.
- पुरस्कार
- 2 जीत और कुल 5 नामांकन
Vilma Ortiz Donovan
- AA Member
- (as Vilma Donovan)
Catherine Taaffe
- AA Member
- (as Catherine A. Taaffe)
Josh Philip Weinstein
- AA Member
- (as Josh P. Weinstein)
फ़ीचर्ड समीक्षाएं
Story of the encounter of two lonely, battered souls, searching for love, peace, acceptance and meaning in life. Told with class, cleverly avoiding cheap sentimentalism, treating viewers as intelligent breed. Scenes are woven together so that story runs smoothly, lightning is beautiful. Jessica is on top form, acting with her usual style, persuasion and expressing just what the story needs. Sarsgaard gets under your skin with ease and charm. Merrit Wever is again persuading with her detachment and minimalism, reasons revealed at the end.
Movie that touches you deep, connects and lets you leave the theatre grateful for what it gives you. Highly recommended.
Movie that touches you deep, connects and lets you leave the theatre grateful for what it gives you. Highly recommended.
Hoo-boy, adulting is hard. There is very little light in this overcast tale of struggling grown-ups, resulting in a tough viewing experience.
Jessica Chastain, as an emotionally detached, recovering alcoholic single mother, and Peter Sarsgaard as a gentle giant simple man suffering from the onset of dementia, form an unlikely, damaged couple. Hated in fact. Sylvia believes Saul attacked her in high-school, and carries a lifetime of spite. Saul has no memory of the event, can offer no real defense, only a meek apology.
Mexican writer and director Michel Franco spins a messy web dealing with various memory issues with all parties involved. The film takes time to develop, often at an infuriating pace, offering very little to solve the puzzle, and presents it all in an uncomfortable, grey sheen. The dialogue rings true though, characters stumble over each others' words. Silences are achingly long as pregnant thoughts are sometimes aborted, or awkwardly presented. The stark realism that feels improvised on the spot, might be a great achievement, but it is not for everyone.
The leads are magnificent, stumbling through their vulnerabilities, and eventual hard truth reveals. Kudos. Those dedicated enough to go along for the ride will be rewarded with what amounts to closure, and more importantly, something to ponder in the days to come.
Jessica Chastain, as an emotionally detached, recovering alcoholic single mother, and Peter Sarsgaard as a gentle giant simple man suffering from the onset of dementia, form an unlikely, damaged couple. Hated in fact. Sylvia believes Saul attacked her in high-school, and carries a lifetime of spite. Saul has no memory of the event, can offer no real defense, only a meek apology.
Mexican writer and director Michel Franco spins a messy web dealing with various memory issues with all parties involved. The film takes time to develop, often at an infuriating pace, offering very little to solve the puzzle, and presents it all in an uncomfortable, grey sheen. The dialogue rings true though, characters stumble over each others' words. Silences are achingly long as pregnant thoughts are sometimes aborted, or awkwardly presented. The stark realism that feels improvised on the spot, might be a great achievement, but it is not for everyone.
The leads are magnificent, stumbling through their vulnerabilities, and eventual hard truth reveals. Kudos. Those dedicated enough to go along for the ride will be rewarded with what amounts to closure, and more importantly, something to ponder in the days to come.
- hipCRANK.
Sylvia is a social worker who leads a simple and structured life. This is blown open when Saul follows her home from their high school reunion. Their surprise encounter will profoundly impact both of them as they open the door to the past.
The roles are played admirably by all of the main actors and with little prompt or background or character development, we slowly get to understand the main players and what drives them.
Sylvia is affected deeply by past memories that people try to convince her are untrue and that she is a liar and a bad person.
Saul cannot remember much at all as he has dementia. Polar opposites and yet attracted to one another leaning on each others strengths, whilst supporting each others weaknesses.
It's a little insight into dealing with people with dementia, and a glimpse of how people with a traumatic background can suffer right through life.
It's the friends and family who have to stand by them in times of stress.
It's a very quiet film with little meaningful dialogue, and some scenes where you have to fill in the blanks for yourself so if you're not getting what the film is about, you'll probably dislike it intensely.
If you do understand the work, family and personal dynamics you'll probably stick with it and love it by the end despite it being a hard watch.
I do believe Jessica Chastain can take any role, any role at all and turn it into something beautiful.
Main drawback: big chunks of dialogue are muttered so you don't hear what's aid. Watch this film with subtitles or you miss nuances.
The roles are played admirably by all of the main actors and with little prompt or background or character development, we slowly get to understand the main players and what drives them.
Sylvia is affected deeply by past memories that people try to convince her are untrue and that she is a liar and a bad person.
Saul cannot remember much at all as he has dementia. Polar opposites and yet attracted to one another leaning on each others strengths, whilst supporting each others weaknesses.
It's a little insight into dealing with people with dementia, and a glimpse of how people with a traumatic background can suffer right through life.
It's the friends and family who have to stand by them in times of stress.
It's a very quiet film with little meaningful dialogue, and some scenes where you have to fill in the blanks for yourself so if you're not getting what the film is about, you'll probably dislike it intensely.
If you do understand the work, family and personal dynamics you'll probably stick with it and love it by the end despite it being a hard watch.
I do believe Jessica Chastain can take any role, any role at all and turn it into something beautiful.
Main drawback: big chunks of dialogue are muttered so you don't hear what's aid. Watch this film with subtitles or you miss nuances.
Whilst the subject matter here is quite interesting, the execution isn't especially. "Sylvia" (Jessica Chastain) is working in the social care system whilst bringing up her daughter "Anna" (Brooke Taylor). Her life, as effectively illustrated by her door locking and burglar alarm routine each day, is a structured affair with little variation. She has a strong relationship with her sister but is completely estranged from her mother. The two women attend a school reunion one night and, leaving early, she is followed home. It's a miserable night and next morning she discovers him asleep outside her door. Inspecting his wallet, she discovers his identity and calls his brother "Isaac" (Josh Charles) who explains that "Saul" (Peter Sarsgaard) has memory issues. Was he stalking her or is there more to this rather meandering scenario? Chastain does work quite well, but I found the story seemed to randomly inject way too many "incidents" along the way that seemed designed to enliven or empower the plot. Many seemed a little too disaster-scenario prone and are used to enhance purely for dramatic purposes. The culminating scenes lacked plausibility and at times the whole thing came across as little better than an A-list soap opera. Coincidence underpins just a bit too much of the film and the delivery of information about the characters to the audience is all delivered in just too sporadically a fashion. I felt sorry for just about everyone involved, but I didn't feel particularly engaged.
It's a drama of two persons with damaged memories seeking solace. The film is set in New York City in the early 2000s. Sylvia (Jessica Chastain) is a single mom who is overly protective of her 12-13-year-old daughter, Anna (Brooke Timber). Sylvia, an alcoholic who has been sober for 12 years, relates to her younger sister, Olivia (Merritt Wever), but is estranged from her mother, Samantha (Jessica Harper). The viewer soon learns of Sylvia's memories of abuse as a pre-teen.
Saul (Peter Sarsgaard) lives with his brother, Issac (Josh Charles). Saul's wife died some time ago. He has early-onset dementia that displays in unusual ways. Sylvia and Saul encounter each other at a reunion at the high school they both attended.
The film follows their improbable relationship that evolves despite a very rocky start. Their families react in different ways to what they observe in the relationship, and the ending is, in my mind, ambiguous.
Chastain is marvelous in her character. Sarsgaard is good, but the nature of his role makes for a relatively narrow personality. The role of Anna seems a tad unrealistic, but Timber plays it well. I found the film's editing to be superb. And I've always loved the Procul Harum song, "A Whiter Shade of Pale," that repeats as a theme throughout. Although the story feels improbable, I loved it.
Saul (Peter Sarsgaard) lives with his brother, Issac (Josh Charles). Saul's wife died some time ago. He has early-onset dementia that displays in unusual ways. Sylvia and Saul encounter each other at a reunion at the high school they both attended.
The film follows their improbable relationship that evolves despite a very rocky start. Their families react in different ways to what they observe in the relationship, and the ending is, in my mind, ambiguous.
Chastain is marvelous in her character. Sarsgaard is good, but the nature of his role makes for a relatively narrow personality. The role of Anna seems a tad unrealistic, but Timber plays it well. I found the film's editing to be superb. And I've always loved the Procul Harum song, "A Whiter Shade of Pale," that repeats as a theme throughout. Although the story feels improbable, I loved it.
क्या आपको पता है
- ट्रिवियाAccording to Variety, Jessica Chastain recommended Peter Sarsgaard for the role of Saul.
- कनेक्शनFeatured in The 7PM Project: 15 नवम्बर 2024 को प्रसारित एपिसोड (2024)
- साउंडट्रैकA Whiter Shade of Pale
Written by Keith Reid, Gary Brooker, and Matthew Fisher
Published by TRO - Essex Music, Inc.
टॉप पसंद
रेटिंग देने के लिए साइन-इन करें और वैयक्तिकृत सुझावों के लिए वॉचलिस्ट करें
- How long is Memory?Alexa द्वारा संचालित
विवरण
- रिलीज़ की तारीख़
- कंट्री ऑफ़ ओरिजिन
- भाषा
- इस रूप में भी जाना जाता है
- Memoria
- फ़िल्माने की जगहें
- उत्पादन कंपनियां
- IMDbPro पर और कंपनी क्रेडिट देखें
बॉक्स ऑफ़िस
- बजट
- $1,00,000(अनुमानित)
- US और कनाडा में सकल
- $3,81,052
- US और कनाडा में पहले सप्ताह में कुल कमाई
- $36,356
- 24 दिस॰ 2023
- दुनिया भर में सकल
- $20,74,586
इस पेज में योगदान दें
किसी बदलाव का सुझाव दें या अनुपलब्ध कॉन्टेंट जोड़ें