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IMDbPro

À la folie

Original title: Like Crazy
  • 2011
  • PG-13
  • 1h 26m
IMDb RATING
6.6/10
64K
YOUR RATING
Felicity Jones and Anton Yelchin in À la folie (2011)
A British college student falls for an American student, only to be separated from him when she's banned from the U.S. after overstaying her visa.
Play trailer2:25
10 Videos
99+ Photos
Steamy RomanceDramaRomance

A British college student falls for an American student, only to be separated from him when she's banned from the U.S. after overstaying her visa.A British college student falls for an American student, only to be separated from him when she's banned from the U.S. after overstaying her visa.A British college student falls for an American student, only to be separated from him when she's banned from the U.S. after overstaying her visa.

  • Director
    • Drake Doremus
  • Writers
    • Drake Doremus
    • Ben York Jones
  • Stars
    • Felicity Jones
    • Anton Yelchin
    • Jennifer Lawrence
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.6/10
    64K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Drake Doremus
    • Writers
      • Drake Doremus
      • Ben York Jones
    • Stars
      • Felicity Jones
      • Anton Yelchin
      • Jennifer Lawrence
    • 200User reviews
    • 183Critic reviews
    • 68Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 9 wins & 7 nominations total

    Videos10

    Theatrical Trailer
    Trailer 2:25
    Theatrical Trailer
    Trailer #1
    Trailer 1:57
    Trailer #1
    Trailer #1
    Trailer 1:57
    Trailer #1
    Like Crazy: I Want You
    Clip 1:16
    Like Crazy: I Want You
    Like Crazy: I Love You
    Clip 1:13
    Like Crazy: I Love You
    Like Crazy: I Need You
    Clip 1:13
    Like Crazy: I Need You
    Like Crazy: I Miss You
    Clip 1:02
    Like Crazy: I Miss You

    Photos298

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    Top cast39

    Edit
    Felicity Jones
    Felicity Jones
    • Anna
    Anton Yelchin
    Anton Yelchin
    • Jacob
    Jennifer Lawrence
    Jennifer Lawrence
    • Sam
    Charlie Bewley
    Charlie Bewley
    • Simon
    Alex Kingston
    Alex Kingston
    • Jackie
    Oliver Muirhead
    Oliver Muirhead
    • Bernard
    Finola Hughes
    Finola Hughes
    • Liz
    Chris Messina
    Chris Messina
    • Mike Appletree
    Ben York Jones
    Ben York Jones
    • Ross
    Jamie Thomas King
    Jamie Thomas King
    • Elliot
    Amanda Carlin
    Amanda Carlin
    • American Consulate Woman
    Barry Sabath
    • Professor
    Keeley Hazell
    Keeley Hazell
    • Sabrina
    Kayla Barr Hengami
    Kayla Barr Hengami
    • College Roommate
    • (as Kayla Barr)
    Jimmy Messer
    • Delivery Man
    • (as James Messer)
    Natalie Hoflin
    • Natalie
    • (as Natalie Blair)
    Robert Pike Daniel
    Robert Pike Daniel
    • Court Clerk
    James Tamborello
    • Figurine Band Member
    • (as Jimmy Tamborello)
    • Director
      • Drake Doremus
    • Writers
      • Drake Doremus
      • Ben York Jones
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews200

    6.664.1K
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    Featured reviews

    8pita_mariaulrich

    the true reality of love stories

    I was checking out the storyline when I just realized this movie was the story of my life...almost! But it surprised me very positively.

    I was also married to an American citizen just out of College and had to follow the same process in order to be with him. Truth is, the bureaucratic aspect of it has done exactly the same to my relationship. The movie captures so so well the frustration, the disappointment, the fears of not knowing if you have what it takes to fight "like crazy" for each other;

    The moment in the movie when she calls him and asks him to come over in 30m, breaks my heart! So real, so in despair.

    So, not only because I can relate to the story, but because the acting is superb, so natural and because I believe the production & direction have accomplished what they were looking for with the movie, I give it great points.

    The movie is a true mirror of youth, freshness and it's timeless, Like a Romeo & Julieta of contemporariness.
    JohnDeSando

    Long Distance Dance

    "I thought I understood it. But I didn't. I knew the smudgeness of it. The eagerness of it. The Idea of it. Of you and me." Anna (Felicity Jones)

    Like Crazy is about the craziness of love without a Hollywood spin but with a conventional story that tells it like love is: unadorned, raw, a puzzle, and a disappointment. Director Drake Doremus handed the outline to actors Felicity Jones and Anton Yelchin and the rest was an organic script, albeit weaker than ones Brit director Mike Leigh develops with his cast.

    Although the dialogue is spare and prosaic, the realism is spot on as the young couple struggles most of all with long distance. She is on visa from the UK to study in LA. He meets her at college; she overstays her visa time and is banned from returning to the US until a lengthy process of appeal is followed.

    Those who have struggled with that distance demon know how right the artists get the frustrations and changes that plague those who challenge cupid across the pond over too long a time.

    Although many traditional moviegoers will not like the ending, they can be comforted that it is, alas, only too true. If nothing else, Like Crazy is a textbook study of long distance love that should be a caution before young lovers attempt the navigation.
    9ryanizant-1

    A Heartfelt and Absorbing Love Story

    Just saw it at the Sundance Film Festival here in Park City, Utah.'Like Crazy' is a love story about the ups and the downs, the euphoria, the heartache, and the sacrifices. For those who don't know the plot, basically a British student, Anna, falls for Jacob, an American student. They fall for each other right away, and spend the summer together. However, she violates the stay of her student visa, and when she tries to return to L.A., she is denied. Thus, our two lovers are separated by distance and multiple levels of bureaucracy that prove to be most unfair. Can they make it work, and should they? Some have compared it to '500 Days of Summer,' and there are a few similarities. The major difference is the lack of any unique narrative devices and that it is, in fact, a love story. First and foremost, let me say that Felicity Jones as Anna is a revelation. She owns the screen and was utterly charming and devastatingly beautiful. There's a scene in the first 10 minutes after they spend their first evening together, and they sit on her bed, and a sense of tension but young awkwardness that fills the room. When the conversation falters out, she gives him a look that was filled with such delicate longing; fueled by the power of young love and the possibilities before them. It was in this moment that Anna, and Felicity, won me over. The chemistry between her and her co-star Anton was realistic and powerful. Much of the film was improvised; the director said he would often leave the camera rolling for twenty to thirty minutes at a time just to capture them together. It shows. I felt myself hoping and wishing for them to work it all out, to end up together.

    The music is fantastic. It provides the heartbeat to the film and is a wonderful compliment. It's well edited - the film ultimately takes place over what seems to be a couple of years. Unlike early versions of the film, title cards have been removed and a series of jump cuts progresses the time. You have to pay close attention at times to have a firm grasp on the passage of time. There are moments when they are happy and together that are so iconic. Walking the streets of London, at times they looked like the cover of a Bob Dylan cover. Quick cuts of them together whether in LA or London are quite beautiful.

    This film was obviously made based on real experiences, and the filmmakers admitted that it was the combination of many of their experiences. It's a realistic film. Things aren't easy. You will smile and laugh and other times feel just as much despair as our characters. There are no easy answers in this film, and your ultimate interpretation and perhaps enjoyment of the film depends on what you bring to the table, and your feelings on love, and just how much you believe in it. This film should make Felicity Jones a star in the way that 'An Education' benefited Carey Mulligan.
    7napierslogs

    A story of love, depending on what love really is

    Anna (Felicity Jones) and Jacob (Anton Yelchin) are in love with each like crazy. Hence the title, "Like Crazy". They are in, or want to be in, a grown-up relationship — one where they act like adults and are just a part of each other's lives. But they met each other at college and one stupid idea forces them to make grown-up decisions that will affect the rest of their lives quicker than they would have liked.

    "Like Crazy" is just about their relationship. We watch as they fall in love, grow apart, find a middle road, and then try and pick an extreme. Anna is a writer and Jacob is a furniture constructor. But their lives are just so inconsequential to the film which is the way it has to be when it is only about their relationship.

    The film is minimal in story, in characters, in budget, and in production. And that's what makes it so sweet. Made for only $250,000 and edited in the director's bedroom, it's a story and film of passion.

    I found it to be very similar to "Blue Valentine" (2010), but perhaps not as impactful — at least to me. Both played to rave reviews at Sundance, last year "Blue" picked up the Grand Jury Prize nomination, this year "Crazy" got the Jury win for both director Drake Doremus and actress Felicity Jones.

    I first saw Felicity Jones last year in "Cemetery Junction" (2010). She played this beautifully innocent girl in a town where innocence just doesn't really exist. In "Like Crazy" she plays a beautiful, adult-like young woman growing up in a world of love but learns that she might not know what love is after all.
    6WaxBellaAmours

    Like Promise

    As the movie's title suggest, I truly wanted to fall in crazy love with "Like Crazy". By the end, I instead just gave it a pat on the shoulder and became more interested in what the stars and director would be doing after the movie than in the film that just screened. In a movie about the complications that ensue when an American guy named Jacob and a British girl named Anna meet in college, fall in love and then eventually are separated when the latter is denied entry back into the US after overstaying her visa, it's never as compelling as it very well should have been.

    "Like Crazy", a big hit at the Sundance film festival, is well-made and has some scenes of heartbreaking immediacy that give it considerable promise. Unfortunately it only shines through it's individual moments, but as a whole it lacks a certain emotional center as the main romantic pairing, played by Felicity Jones and Anton Yelchin, is just not convincing.

    Not for lack of trying. Director Drake Doremus has certainly made a lovely film out of a very small budget, and again proves (after his first film Douchebag) that he has a way of coaxing some nuanced performances out of familiar character archetypes. It's refreshing to see a movie where people don't always know the perfect thing to say and end up saying what they actually feel, or feeling unable to say anything at all. And his understated mis-en-scene and on-the-cheap cinematography is quite impressive, bringing a very cinematic atmosphere to "Like Crazy" despite the film's modest means.

    For the central pairing, Jones (a distinctly lovely actress with a remarkably subtle face and physical acting style) in particular brings a fascinating duality to her character of Anna: she can feel both warm and reserved, naive but very intelligent and observant. Jones slowly melds what could initially seem like a contradiction into a very real, imperfect human character that you can't quite understand but you can feel remarkably close to, and it's easy to see how someone could be very drawn to her. Anton Yelchin, as Jacob, has the much harder task: his Jacob has an almost too-passive interest in this love affair, but while the character on the page might be too much of a cipher, Yelchin has a clever acting style that suggests there's more to Jacob than meets the eye.

    And there's no questioning that "Like Crazy" is a consistiently engaging and intriguing experience. There's just a big problem when the central romance in an in-and-out-of-love story is the weakest part of film. Their relationship ultimately feels completely tied to plot, with no real sense that it would exist off camera. We become interested in Jacob and Anna individually, but never as a couple.

    Jacob seems rather unwilling to uproot his life to be with her, or even borrow money from her parents so he can stay the post-graduation summer in England, and it is a bit baffling to wonder how someone as smart (or supposedly smart) as Anna would be willing to overlook his slowly growing indifference and find out far too late that their romance is dying.

    There's a bit of suspense later on, as both Jacob and Anna get romantically tempted by someone close to them (by Jennifer Lawerence and Charlie Bewley, respectively), but that plot devolpment ultimately feels as superficial and mechanical as the movie's main immigration predicament. It's more an affirtmation of Lawrence's considerable talents as an actress that she takes a role as contrived as this and ends up making the audience truly feel her heartbreak. Though it's a big problem when we're more torn up over the affair rather than the movie's main romance.

    It's not that there isn't a sense of real care and affection between Jacob and Anna, but the movie just doesn't take enough time to let us figure out exactly what exists between the two. It seems like while Anna may be in crazy stupid love, Jacob seems to see it as a passionate summer fling but nothing to change his life for. You end up wishing they would just move on and live their lives rather than root for them to make it through their immigration-complicated struggle, as the feelings just do not seem to be reciprocated. The disintegration of their relationship feels more expected and, frankly, welcome than it is heartbreaking.

    Perhaps what's hindering the central romance is that the movie is far too hurried and uneven that it doesn't really have time to show a substantive, organic growth of Anna and Jacob's relationship. The early scenes of Jacob and Anna's romance are far too brief (with an excessive fondness of montages and quick scene cuts) and far too much screen time is spent after Anna's banned from the US that "Crazy" never really has time to breathe. There's never any time to truly reveal what would make these two would-be romantics not only connect but fall passionately in love with each other. Surely it's more than a mutual love for Paul Simon's "Graceland" or rides in go-karts (yep, that's in the movie too).

    Perhaps it's a compliment to say that the film should've been a bit longer, but it also means we're left needing more. The movie does have a potentially terrific ending, but too bad the charming but uncogent scenes before make it an afterthought rather than something more potent and emotional. That makes the whole experience just all the more tantalizing and disappointing. We haven't fallen in love with "Like Crazy", we're just enamored with what could've been.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      At the Toronto International Film Festival (2011), the director admitted that much of the movie was improvised. The script outlined what would happen, but Felicity Jones and Anton Yelchin improvised much of their dialogue.
    • Goofs
      During the party scene where Jacob meets Sam and is receiving texts from Anna, the date of her first text is December 1st. The second text, received moments later is dated May 23rd.
    • Quotes

      Anna: I thought I understood it, that I could grasp it, but I didn't, not really. Only the smudgeness of it; the pink-slippered, all-containered, semi-precious eagerness of it. I didn't realize it would sometimes be more than whole, that the wholeness was a rather luxurious idea. Because it's the halves that halve you in half. I didn't know, don't know, about the in-between bits; the gory bits of you, and the gory bits of me.

    • Connections
      Featured in Ebert Presents: At the Movies: Episode #2.15 (2011)
    • Soundtracks
      Crazy Love, Vol. II
      Written by Paul Simon

      Performed by Paul Simon

      Published by Songs of Universal, Inc. on behalf of Paul Simon Music

      By arrangement with Sony Music Licensing

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • July 15, 2012 (France)
    • Countries of origin
      • United States
      • United Kingdom
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Con locura
    • Filming locations
      • London, England, UK
    • Production companies
      • Paramount Vantage
      • Indian Paintbrush
      • Super Crispy Entertainment
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Budget
      • $250,000 (estimated)
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $3,395,391
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $123,140
      • Oct 30, 2011
    • Gross worldwide
      • $3,852,774
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour 26 minutes
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby Digital
      • Datasat
      • SDDS
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.78 : 1

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    Felicity Jones and Anton Yelchin in À la folie (2011)
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