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Richard Gere and Diane Kruger in Longing (2024)

User reviews

Longing

18 reviews
6/10

Confusing but I enjoyed it.

  • crystaljennings-54502
  • Jan 31, 2025
  • Permalink
5/10

The cracks make it crumble

Fiction, whether a book or a film, always requires a willing suspension of disbelief. After all, it's entertainment: you know life and events rarely move forward the way the author presents them, but it's enjoyable to imagine the 'what if?'.

Richard Gere brings his A-game to everything he does. For the first half of the movie, I believe him, and I can see his character's journey. But then, things no longer make sense.

Why does everyone talk and act as if the deceased son was still alive? Why do the supporting characters go along with the craziness? Why does the movie suddenly drop the connection to Daniel's business in New York?

Are all the events of the movie supposed to happen within a week? If so, how could the final scene be even possible?

I like how the movie slowly unfolds and paints a realistic picture of the deceased son with a rich but flawed personality. If the movie focused on how Daniel reassesses his own life based on the life of a son he never knew he had until the week before, I think this would have been a fine movie. But the film adds one implausibility to another and another, until I can no longer suspend my disbelief.
  • ChristopherW-18
  • May 17, 2025
  • Permalink
3/10

Unanswered Storyline

  • richpaloma
  • Jul 28, 2024
  • Permalink
2/10

Concur with Pretty Stupid

I saw the previous review and thought, well, it can't be that bad. But, it was. It started out pretty good and then before long devolved into bizarre then insanity. Just strange. I kept thinking that there would be some twist that I didn't see coming and that then I would understand all of the bizarre behavior and acting. That never happened. It just got worse and worse. Even at the end I though that something would happen, but it didn't. Overall I think the acting was fine, but the story was just not very good. The movie left me feeling really nothing, except that I wasted a bunch of time. Don't bother with this movie.
  • cawingcrow
  • Jul 10, 2024
  • Permalink
2/10

Uncomfortably perplexing & odd drama - not in a good way

In uncomfortably odd drama "Longing" Canadian Suzanne Clément suddenly tells ex-bf NY mogul Richard Gere that after they split up 20yrs ago she had his son... who's now just died in a car crash. Cue Gere taking off to Cambridge, Ontario to learn some harsh truths about the lad (from the likes of Diane Kruger) while engaging in some pushy and downright bizarre behaviour (like arranging a wedding between the dead son he never knew and a dead girl that the boy had also never met). What writer / director Savi Gabizon was going for in remaking his own 2007 Israeli original (of the same name) is unclear... but the result's perplexing... and not in a good way. Flush it.
  • danieljfarthing
  • Jul 11, 2024
  • Permalink
7/10

impressive

Wow. Such a great script, such a great thriller. Perfect acting, charismatic actors .. just a delight.

Haven't seen anything like it . Went from laughing to crying to laughing again. So much conflict , so much sanity!

The critique? Alright, I'll spell it out considering the polarization of this movie.

My critique is about the son's actor, not resembling any of the parents in grace or beauty, and about the dream. The dream could've been less .. erotic, but I guess it is rather realistic that way.

It is so rare to find art that is so uplifting and hopeful .. and representing reality accurately.

Praise God!
  • nim-rod77
  • Dec 17, 2024
  • Permalink
1/10

Not a thriller.

  • brooke-140
  • Aug 3, 2024
  • Permalink
7/10

How strange ... yet it works, mostly

  • cosmochickita
  • Jan 11, 2025
  • Permalink
3/10

Super bad but points for food filming and music

  • lamija990
  • Aug 4, 2024
  • Permalink
10/10

A Tragicomic Masterpiece

I loved this film and can't understand why it has such a low rating. The story develops beautifully from start to finish, with plenty of twists and turns, a lovely sense of humor, and a great cast delivering fantastic performances. What I like most is the balance: neither the actors nor the script become overly dramatic, despite the characters' significant pain. The humor is perfectly balanced as well-any more or less, and it wouldn't work. Well done. It seems like audiences are getting less discerning by the day. If you don't understand what you're watching, please refrain from rating it. I strongly recommend this unconventionally sweet movie.
  • sepetcenk
  • Jul 17, 2024
  • Permalink
1/10

Depressing old farts

Saw this in a 'surprise' screening of a random new movie.

The movie starts by Richard Gere and his ex from 20 years ago reconnecting, finding out that he had a son etc.

From the starting scene on I wanted to leave the cinema but I had just bought popcorn so decided to soldier on. That was a mistake.

Two hours later movie ended. Not a single laugh / chuckle from audience during the movie. Nobody looked happy while leaving the cinema. People around me were pondering is it ok to just sneak out halfway of the film.

The film was a mess, hard to relate to any of the characters and the grand wedding finale feels very flat. In Cinema I felt a wave of relief that it ended. That was also the only time audience seemed to react to the film.
  • Mud-D-Y
  • Sep 29, 2024
  • Permalink
2/10

Reboot that doesn't really seem to have been fleshed out, making it feel unnecessary and long-winded.

Longing is an English reboot directed, written and partly produced by Savi Gabizon, who released a similar French Hebrew version called Ga'agua in 2017.

Businessman Daniel Bloch (Richard Gere) lives a rich life and never wanted children. When he learns from an old girlfriend that they had a son, but he has died, Daniel decides to immerse himself in the old life of his unknown, surviving son. In this way he learns about his life choices and is confronted with the mistakes he has made. He tries to correct these, so that he can leave him with dignity.

Despite the fact that this is a reboot of an earlier, similar film, you would expect the writer-director to have worked it out a bit more. However, there are logical details missing, which makes the film seem vague, far-fetched, or sometimes unintentionally comical instead of truly dramatic or emotional.

Because the father tries to live the life of his surviving son, many moments come to the fore in the film. Because you as a viewer have not really experienced this son, this revival seems rather long-winded than really emotional. Many scenes also go on for too long or have unnecessary, short scenes between the events.

Due to the lack of good direction and writing direction, the cast members also seem somewhat uncertain and unclear, which means you do not really care about their characters. The strange choices they make only make this more difficult.
  • movieman6-413-929510
  • Oct 12, 2024
  • Permalink
1/10

Rubbish

I gave a little hope to this movie because of the casting and a breif storyline introduced. However, at the end, I could not understand why the people involved in productionbwould think the story is fine and really made it happen. What a disappointed movie which absolutely wastes my time and triggered my anger after that.

A father who never knew his son before made a series of stuipd and silly things but everyone around him also did the same. I could not see any love from this movie but just non sense actions and decisions made.

If anyone finds difficult in sleeping, this movie may help you.
  • shing-87235
  • Oct 3, 2024
  • Permalink
2/10

Disappointed

  • pmpmn9
  • Jan 29, 2025
  • Permalink
1/10

Psychorama with a screaming siren & flashing lights

  • vytas-64410
  • Jun 3, 2025
  • Permalink
8/10

A Darkly Minimalist Drama

I enjoyed this film a great deal, not least because of Richard Gere's deeply convincing dramatic portrayal of Richard Bloch, a man who becomes obsessed with the son he never knew, and who becomes determined to find validation of himself through the boy he never met. The story unfolds slowly, gradually disclosing its secrets only, it would seem, incidentally. Meanwhile, Bloch discovers in himself, the dutiful son, also what might have been a doting father. Sidetracked from the vocation of fatherhood, he becomes a successful, if insular individual and it's only through the unexpected encounter with a child he never met, does he engage with the promise within himself that had gone unrealized - even as his expectations are diminished and the idealism of fatherhood is laid bare by a son, who, finally falls far short. It's a brilliant study in paternal love and longing, imo, and wonderfully acted by all. Gere's performance, was for me, a revelation. I simply never expected this of him. Offbeat, and quite dark, this film will appeal to people who enjoy stories from life; who are ok with the unconventional, and engage with life's complexities.
  • DisinterestedWisdom
  • Jan 26, 2025
  • Permalink
10/10

Outstanding storyline and acting!

  • triloquist
  • Oct 23, 2024
  • Permalink
10/10

A Perfect Movie

Where do I start? With the superb acting? The genuinely not- cookie- cutter predictable story?

Or how about the true meaning of the film's title as devolves throughout the story?

This work of art left me longing for more films of this caliber.

This is a must- see!

I most enjoyed watching the characters themselves reveal dark secrets from many years past that haunt them, the novel, albeit unusual, way in which they dealt with the concomitant trauma, each character's hard- won redemption, and the graceful way that the story ended: simply and eloquently, never maudlin or sentimental.

And I thought that they didn't make movies this good anymore!
  • npkulakofski
  • Mar 24, 2025
  • Permalink

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