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IMDbPro

Une histoire de famille

Original title: Then She Found Me
  • 2007
  • R
  • 1h 40m
IMDb RATING
5.9/10
11K
YOUR RATING
Une histoire de famille (2007)
This is the theatrical trailer for Then She Found Me, directed by Helen Hunt.
Play trailer2:31
11 Videos
56 Photos
ComedyDramaRomance

April, 39, wants a baby but her husband leaves her. When her adoptive mother dies, she's contacted by her biological mother, a TV talk show host. April starts seeing the divorced dad of one ... Read allApril, 39, wants a baby but her husband leaves her. When her adoptive mother dies, she's contacted by her biological mother, a TV talk show host. April starts seeing the divorced dad of one of her students at school.April, 39, wants a baby but her husband leaves her. When her adoptive mother dies, she's contacted by her biological mother, a TV talk show host. April starts seeing the divorced dad of one of her students at school.

  • Director
    • Helen Hunt
  • Writers
    • Elinor Lipman
    • Alice Arlen
    • Victor Levin
  • Stars
    • Helen Hunt
    • Colin Firth
    • Bette Midler
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    5.9/10
    11K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Helen Hunt
    • Writers
      • Elinor Lipman
      • Alice Arlen
      • Victor Levin
    • Stars
      • Helen Hunt
      • Colin Firth
      • Bette Midler
    • 91User reviews
    • 68Critic reviews
    • 56Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 3 wins & 1 nomination total

    Videos11

    Then She Found Me: Theatrical trailer
    Trailer 2:31
    Then She Found Me: Theatrical trailer
    Then She Found Me
    Clip 1:32
    Then She Found Me
    Then She Found Me
    Clip 1:32
    Then She Found Me
    Then She Found Me
    Clip 2:02
    Then She Found Me
    Then She Found Me
    Clip 1:40
    Then She Found Me
    Then She Found Me
    Clip 0:56
    Then She Found Me
    Then She Found Me
    Clip 2:04
    Then She Found Me

    Photos56

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    Top cast43

    Edit
    Helen Hunt
    Helen Hunt
    • April Epner
    Colin Firth
    Colin Firth
    • Frank
    Bette Midler
    Bette Midler
    • Bernice Graves
    Matthew Broderick
    Matthew Broderick
    • Ben
    Ben Shenkman
    Ben Shenkman
    • Freddy
    Lynn Cohen
    Lynn Cohen
    • Trudy Epner
    John Benjamin Hickey
    John Benjamin Hickey
    • Alan
    Salman Rushdie
    Salman Rushdie
    • Dr. Masani
    Daisy Tahan
    Daisy Tahan
    • Ruby
    Tommy Nelson
    Tommy Nelson
    • Jimmy Ray
    Stephanie Yankwitt
    Stephanie Yankwitt
    • Stacey
    Lillias White
    Lillias White
    • Sheila
    • (as Lillias D. White)
    David Callegati
    David Callegati
    • Gianni
    Kenneth Stern
    • Rabbi
    • (as Rabbi Kenneth A. Stern)
    Robert LuPone
    Robert LuPone
    • Ted
    Chris Chalk
    Chris Chalk
    • Orderly
    Alexa Scott-Flaherty
    • Mother #2
    Marina Durell
    • Attendant
    • Director
      • Helen Hunt
    • Writers
      • Elinor Lipman
      • Alice Arlen
      • Victor Levin
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews91

    5.910.5K
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    Featured reviews

    7EUyeshima

    Another Biological Clock Ticks…But Hunt Provides Heart and Conviction to Her Directorial Debut

    Having just seen "Baby Mama", which covers the same emotional territory but in much broader slapstick terms, this 2008 serio-comedy is driven far more by character than situation. In this case, the protagonist is 39-year-old April Epner, a New York schoolteacher who was raised in a close-knit Jewish family and desperately wants the biological connection of a birth child before her alarm clock goes off. She marries fellow teacher Ben, an inarticulate schlub with a terminal case of the Peter Pan Syndrome. After a brief time, he wants out of the marriage, and at almost the same time, April's adoptive mother Trudy dies. Not even a month goes by before April's biological mother suddenly shows up in the form of the brazenly overbearing but genuinely likable Bernice Graves, a cable talk-show hostess who is something of a local media celebrity. If life was not complicated enough, April also finds herself drawn to Frank, the single father of one of her pupils. Unlike Ben, he feels the same about April but is fighting his own bitterness about his own recent divorce.

    Not only does Helen Hunt star as April, but she also co-wrote the screenplay with Alice Arlen and Victor Levin and makes her big-screen directorial debut. Granted she's more impressive as an actress than a filmmaker, but as a director and writer, she makes the most of a storyline that stacks the deck a bit like a Lifetime TV-movie. There are enough realistic surprises that take the plot off the rails in a good way. Looking gaunt and avoiding much make-up, Hunt is really playing a variation of the beaten-down waitress she played in "As Good As It Gets", as she carries that same constantly pained expression of disappointment and looks about to explode during moments of emotional duress. However, a decade later, Hunt inhabits the character more naturalistically this time and with a deeper sense of vulnerability and haggard exhaustion. Perhaps to minimize any unnecessary dramatic risk, Hunt cast the other principal roles with actors playing familiar parts. Matthew Broderick effectively portrays Ben as the perpetually dazed man-child he is, while perennial love interest Colin Firth gives texture to the seemingly ideal suitor Frank, especially as he edges toward the breaking point in tolerating the sum of April's foibles.

    In one of her increasingly rare screen appearances, Bette Midler gives a scene-stealing performance as Bernice. She lights up the movie with Bernice's unfettered sense of abandonment while gradually exposing the secrets that threaten to undermine her newly found relationship with her daughter. Other parts are played with minimum fuss - Ben Shenkman as April's physician brother Freddy feeling put-upon for having a biological tie to their mother, and Salman Rushdie (author of "The Satanic Verses" which brought him a death sentence from the Ayatollah Khomeini in 1989) as April's doctor. Hunt provides her actors, especially herself, plenty of good, meaty scenes with opportunities for bravura moments. It just doesn't quite come together as a whole by the end, and that may be that Hunt is so used to the sitcom format of the long-running series, "Mad About You". The result is that some laughs feel a bit contrived, some scene transitions seem jarring, and some expected character revelations are given short shrift. Nonetheless, the dramatic developments toward the end carry the emotional impact necessary to make the movie truly affecting, and Hunt should be given credit for a most auspicious debut as a filmmaker.
    7cloudymorning

    Great movie, especially for the married, divorced and close to forty set

    I popped into the theater one night because I happened to be driving by and had some time to myself. I hadn't seen a movie in a while and had no idea what was playing or what "Then She Found Me" was about, but 'Colin Firth' and 'Helen Hunt' caught my eye so I figured I couldn't go wrong.

    I was expecting your typical light-hearted rom-com, but instead found myself engrossed in a very moving and believable story, thanks to the marvelous acting of Firth and Hunt. Still romantic and still on the lighter side, but with nice balance of despair and heartache to remind you that life sucks sometimes.

    In my humble opinion, however, Matthew Broderick came across as a bit blank and not quite believable as the "one person in the world" that could make Helen Hunt do anything. And quite frankly (I know I'll get slammed for this), Bette Middler bore my socks off. Does she ever play any other type of character? It was like "Beaches" all over again. That being said, Firth and Hunt were still able carry out a damn good movie.
    6moutonbear25

    And Then What?

    We've all had our share of bad weeks and I've heard numerous times before that when it rains it pours but yet that still doesn't seem to account for what happened to April Epner (Helen Hunt). A mere ten months into her marriage to Ben (Matthew Broderick), he decides he made a huge mistake. The next day, she goes to work, a school where she and Ben both taught to primary students, to find that he never showed up and is nowhere to be found. Within the week that follows, her adopted mother (Lynn Cohen) dies and her birth mother (Bette Midler) makes contact with her for the first time. It's no wonder the bags under April's eyes are so heavy.

    Hunt's directorial debut, THEN SHE FOUND ME, begins so tragically but attempts then to lighten the mood with awkward comedy and untimely romance. The combination is a bizarre contradiction that just falls flat. It doesn't feel right to laugh just yet as there hasn't been time to mourn but we don't want to mourn either as we only just met these folks. We don't know how to feel or where to go and neither does the direction of the film. When the dust from April's disastrous week finally begins to settle, the film finally begins to breathe normally again and finds a particular charm in its decidedly neurotic voice. Still, it is more unsettling than it is satisfying.

    While Hunt may be overly sentimental as a director, she finds a certain harshness in her acting style that becomes the film's most unifying source. As put upon as she is at this juncture in her life, she manages to juggle everything reasonably well by balancing between protecting herself, demanding what she deserves and allowing her defenses down at just the right moments and only to those who deserve entry. The woman deserves happiness, be that in the form of a new love with troubled suitor, Frank (Colin Firth), or by realizing her longtime desire to have a child, but her life only gets continuously more complicated, sometimes by her own doing. I would ordinarily want to hug someone in April's position but mostly I just wanted to shake her.

    What ultimately undermines THEN SHE FOUND ME is its own air of self-loathing. Hunt spends so much time trying to incite sympathy for April by dumping so many hard realities on to her at once but then punishes her when all she has done is try to keep her head above water. It's hard to feel love for a face on the screen when the woman who put her there hasn't made up her mind herself.
    3Danusha_Goska

    Wretched Script Cannot Be Redeemed by All Star Cast

    "Then She Found Me" is a wretched movie, and it should not be. The talent here is undeniable: Helen Hunt, Colin Firth, Matthew Broderick, Bette Midler. The problem? An unforgivably awful script. Can anyone in Hollywood read? Hollywood is a world capital of entertainment, of magic; there is so much talent there. And yet, year after year, these awful scripts are greenlighted and talented writers starve. What gives?

    The main character, April Epner (Helen Hunt) is never fleshed out. What we do know about her makes her incredibly unappealing. She's obsessed with her plump, middle-aged, boy-man husband (Broderick) who has left her to live in his mother's house. April is shrill and rude to her dying mother. She's manipulative and callow in her interactions with Colin Firth, the man all sensible women love and would treat like the treasure he is. In a particularly painful scene, Frank (Firth) makes a poignant confession of love to April, and she blows him off in order to gripe to her husband in a cell phone call. I was literally shouting at the screen, "Run, Colin, run! Get away from this nasty loser female as fast as ever you can!" It doesn't stop there. April attempts to have a quickie with her husband in the back seat of a car. On a busy city street. In broad daylight. With the car door open. It was such an ugly, gratuitous scene. It marked April as someone suffering from borderline personality disorder. But it doesn't stop there. April casually invites both her husband and her boyfriend to her gynecologist's office for an exam, in stirrups and johnny coat, to ascertain that she is pregnant, by her husband. WHY should we care about this woman? Why should Colin Firth be attracted to her? What inspired his poignant love confession? Nothing. There is nothing on screen, nothing in the script, that ever fleshes his attraction out.

    Speaking of "flesh" … if you read comments here or on the web, you can see that most viewers were fixated on how haggard Helen Hunt looks. She is very thin, and time has not been kind to her face. In some scenes, it is impossible to look at her and not want to sit her down and get some food into her, she looks that much like a refugee from some catastrophe. Some viewers applauded Hunt for being "brave" and allowing the camera access, but focusing on Helen Hunt's courage utterly detracts from ever registering April Epner as a flesh and blood human being. You're not thinking about April Epner, you're thinking, "Hmm…how could Helen Hunt change her look?" Similarly, Bette Midler is never convincing as the character she is playing. She is always Bette Midler, bodacious saloon singer, breezing through a film with a script that is decidedly unworthy of any attempt on her part to bother to pretend to be anyone but Bette Midler.

    Failed films like this are so painful because there are so few movies made for women over forty. The glory days that could produce a script like Mankiewicz's "All About Eve" are long behind us. Drek like this make us miss classics like that all the more. Older women do lead interesting lives. There are so many real questions that this film could have explored for a forty-plus schoolteacher whose husband wants to leave her. This film ignored all of those real questions and just plopped Colin Firth, the perfect man, and Bette Midler, STAR, in as phony, bogus attempts to stir up some kind of a plot. Sorry – without writing talent and insight, which this script utterly lacks – even starpower like Firth's and Middler's can't create a worthy film.
    6gelman@attglobal.net

    A Sleeper

    If "Then She Found Me" got any real notice when it came out, it certainly passed by me. I didn't know what to expect when I chose the streaming video version, mainly because I've always liked Helen Hunt, and she's backed by a pretty impressive cast. Although it's certainly no blockbuster, the film is well worth seeing. Since it is immediately disclosed, I don't feel I'm spoiling anything in saying that Hunt plays the part of an adopted woman whose marriage at age 39 fails almost immediately because her groom (Matthew Broderick) is completely immature. Hunt's character (April Hepner) is unexpectedly confronted by her birth mother (Bette Midler) and also finds herself in a potentially romantic relationship with Frank (Colin Firth), a single father with two children whose wife left the family to travel around the world with her lover. April desperately wants to have a child, and time is quickly running out. Complications ensue on several fronts -- with her birth mother, with the husband from whom she is separated, and with Frank and Frank's kids. Hunt directed this film and co-wrote the script. Although she's a little old to be 39 again, she's still slim, beautiful, a skilled comic actress and believable in a serious, emotionally wrenching role. I can't give the movie more than a 6 but I liked it. The ending, which I won't describe, is plausible but a little too abrupt. However, I'll concede that filling the gap could not have been done quickly. And that's a potent argument for ending it without an explanation as they chose to do.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Feature film writing, directing, and producing debut for Helen Hunt. She also acted.
    • Goofs
      The ultrasound picture at six weeks is not developmentally correct. At six weeks, the baby's features (hands, spine, etc.) would not be able to be distinguished; it would look more like a bean in shape.
    • Quotes

      April Epner: Your wife was seeing someone else?

      Frank: Pretty much everyone else. I was too much for her.

      April Epner: Your wife? I'm sure she didn't feel that way.

      Frank: She told me.

      April Epner: What did she say?

      Frank: 'You're too much for me.'

      April Epner: Ugh.

    • Connections
      Featured in Siskel & Ebert & the Movies: Made of Honor/Son of Rambow/Then She Found Me/Iron Man/Redbelt/Standard Operating Procedure (2008)
    • Soundtracks
      Mazel Tov Zelda - Zeydns Tants
      Written by Dave Tarras

      Performed by The Klezmatics

      Courtesy of Rounder Records

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • October 1, 2008 (France)
    • Countries of origin
      • United Kingdom
      • United States
    • Official sites
      • Former Official site for the film. (Japan)
      • Former Official site for the film. (United States)
    • Languages
      • English
      • Hebrew
      • Italian
      • French
    • Also known as
      • Reencuentro
    • Filming locations
      • Brooklyn, New York City, New York, USA
    • Production companies
      • Odyssey Entertainment
      • Killer Films
      • John Wells Productions
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Budget
      • $3,500,000 (estimated)
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $3,735,717
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $72,594
      • Apr 27, 2008
    • Gross worldwide
      • $8,443,998
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour 40 minutes
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby Digital
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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