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Life/Drawing

  • 2000
  • R
  • 1h 29m
IMDb RATING
4.9/10
742
YOUR RATING
Mark Ruffalo and Beth Ulrich in Life/Drawing (2000)
ComedyRomance

An L.A. artist suddenly finds his life upside down when his art show is canceled and his model girlfriend leaves him.An L.A. artist suddenly finds his life upside down when his art show is canceled and his model girlfriend leaves him.An L.A. artist suddenly finds his life upside down when his art show is canceled and his model girlfriend leaves him.

  • Director
    • Dan Bootzin
  • Writers
    • Dan Bootzin
    • Elizabeth Rivera Bootzin
  • Stars
    • Mark Ruffalo
    • Beth Ulrich
    • Alan Gelfant
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    4.9/10
    742
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Dan Bootzin
    • Writers
      • Dan Bootzin
      • Elizabeth Rivera Bootzin
    • Stars
      • Mark Ruffalo
      • Beth Ulrich
      • Alan Gelfant
    • 9User reviews
    • 6Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 2 wins total

    Photos2

    View Poster
    View Poster

    Top cast43

    Edit
    Mark Ruffalo
    Mark Ruffalo
    • Alex
    Beth Ulrich
    • Lori
    Alan Gelfant
    Alan Gelfant
    • Ray
    Manuel Cabral
    • Loverboy
    Mary Coleston
    • Sylvia
    Krystina Carson
    • Darlene (Parrot Girl)
    Michael J. Saul
    Michael J. Saul
    • Gallery Owner
    Rick Peters
    Rick Peters
    • Lori's Bad Date
    Timothy McNeil
    Timothy McNeil
    • Alex's Boss
    • (as Tim McNeil)
    Ralph Rangel
    • Alex's Co-Worker
    Geoffrey Hughes
    • Marco
    Laurel Green
    • Coyote Date
    Sheri Bagley
    • Ilene
    Thea Constantine
    • Linda
    Don Deforest Paul
    • Cop
    • (as Don Paul)
    Christopher Thornton
    Christopher Thornton
    • Pretentious Artist
    • (as Chris Thornton)
    Sean Howse
    • Pretentious Artist
    Darren Crouch
    • Rude Elevator Guy…
    • Director
      • Dan Bootzin
    • Writers
      • Dan Bootzin
      • Elizabeth Rivera Bootzin
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews9

    4.9742
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    Featured reviews

    6jpschapira

    Having fun with the great Ruffalo

    Recently I wrote about "Just like heaven" and talked about the great Mark Ruffalo; specifically about the comedies he's making these days so people can get to recognize him. I also said that I hoped he'd get back in track soon, to what he does best. "Life/Drawing" (or "Apartment 12") is a film every fan of the actor's got to watch. Ironically, it is a comedy (with a slice of drama), but it remains far away from the big studios.

    Here they'll find Ruffalo at his best acting qualities; with the show all for himself, the camera right on his head, the simplicity in all its extension…An actor like Ruffalo looks for movies like this one, about frustrated artists and lonely human beings. This was four years before "Just like heaven", but his character also has a breakdown here, and stays in bed watching television and eating ice-cream.

    Other than Ruffalo's fantastic character driven performance as Alex, there's nothing much interesting inside this picture. Directed by a now disappeared (did nothing after this) Dan Bootzin, the piece shows the lives of several person that inhabit the same building. Ray (independent figure Alan Gelfant), the manager who's a sexist scumbag; Sylvia, the crying neighbor who cooks and desperately seeks for love and the new girl Lori (Beth Ulrich), who captures Alex's heart.

    A mysterious tall guy who speaks Spanish is always standing and wandering mumbling things in his own language that try to explain a lot. A prostitute who lives besides Alex goes out every night and does this with a different outfit (nurse, police officer). Bootzin observes quietly, slowly. His camera is omnipresent and not at all ambitious; it lays back, creates the environment, and moves faster in a very funny scene where every inhabitant does his thing rapidly. His edition is quick and easy; it leaves a lot to desire.

    Bootzin's screenplay, which he wrote alongside a female colleague, is flexible as life itself. It allows us to watch his characters sitting down in the porch with a cup of hot coffee at 10 a.m. in the morning. It allows us to see how culture and education influence a relationship; because Lori went to the army and Alex paints, and Lori doesn't know how Jackson Pollack was. In fact, as Ray correctly observes: "Nobody knows who Jackson Pollack was".

    This artistic side of the main character played by Ruffalo, which seems to be the core of the character piece, is not extensively developed. His painting is, as many say, "soulless"; or at least at the beginning, because then Alex finds the artistry inside his feelings.

    Even when in the end every character has a big smile in their face, the music inspires happiness and the whole ride has been pleasant, there's a feeling of disappointment. A feeling related to things that could have been present but weren't; to a depth that was intended but didn't appeared.
    7tomtomwww

    An indie romantic comedy that's a cut above

    The downside is that this is pretty much another indie romantic comedy about a backed-up artist who meets a girl and just can't quite get his act together.

    The upside is that it's at times very funny, with quirky, well-drawn characters and terrific performances, particularly by a pre-"You Can Count on Me" Mark Ruffalo.

    On the whole, it's worth checking out.
    1gianmarcoronconi

    A useless waste of time

    This is not a real review, it should be understood more as a collection of impressions on the film.

    This film is a horrendous disaster for several reasons, first of all the plot is banal but it gets over it anyway, the problem is that the whole film seems to have been made without the slightest effort and therefore the result is a boring film full of useless parts and meaningless that ends exactly as everyone would expect without twists and without the slightest involvement of the viewer. This film is like a story that you listen to distractedly just waiting for it to end because you can't stand watching something boring like this anymore. Last thing to say is that the beginning of the film is so senseless as to be unacceptable.
    6rlaustin17

    Average movie for an average rainy day

    Slow and predictable because it ends like most movies in this genre. Beth Ulrich plays a surprisingly refreshing girl next door, but Mark Ruffalo plays a common role and does an average job at it. There is good chemistry between Ulrich and Ruffalo which really makes the movie worthy of being watched at least once. I think what's odd is this overall sense of dread that you get from the first 4/5ths of the movie. There are parts of this movie that will provide a bit of chuckle. Unlike some movies in this genre, it's not much of tear jerker. However, it should leave you feeling a little warm and fuzzy.

    I would recommend this movie to anyone who has experienced heartbreak or just has a rainy day to spend away.
    6inkblot11

    Has its moments but falls short of being a must-see for romcom fans

    Alex (Mark Ruffalo) thinks the world is his oyster at this moment. He is about to have an art showing at a Los Angeles gallery and he shares a beautiful home with a lovely lady. Alas, the gallery manager cancels his show just as Alex says sayonara to his pizza delivery job. Then, in short order, his girlfriend breaks things off by dumping his stuff on the street and leaving a note on the door. Scrambling, the struggling painter finds an apartment in a rundown complex with a wide variety of nutcase tenants. One of them brings a Spam casserole on his first night, ugh. Yet, Alex keeps painting and soon meets a fellow tenant, Lori (Beth Ulrich) who is quite cute but has interests totally dissimilar to his. They have a brief "thing" but are they truly made for each other? Then, too, at a low point, Alex gets an inspiration for a new style of painting. Will this result in his big break? This offbeat romcom has some great ideas which don't quite fully bloom. Ruffalo and Ulrich, nevertheless, and the unknown secondary cast are funny and charming. The seedy sets of LA contrast with the poshier places but the direction slows the pace too much at times. But, if YOU, like ME, get desperate for an unseen romantic comedy now and again, drop by Apartment 12.

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      Mark Ruffalo's first starring role.
    • Soundtracks
      Down Down Down
      Written by Rob Lord

      Performed by Rob Lord

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • 2005 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Languages
      • English
      • Spanish
    • Also known as
      • Apartment 12
    • Production company
      • Six Feet Under Films
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour 29 minutes
    • Color
      • Color

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