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IMDbPro

The Time Being

  • 2012
  • Not Rated
  • 1h 25m
IMDb RATING
5.4/10
922
YOUR RATING
Frank Langella and Wes Bentley in The Time Being (2012)
Struggling young artist Daniel's ambitions have pushed his marriage to the brink. When a reclusive millionaire named Warner purchases one of his pieces, he hopes for additional commissions from a new benefactor. Instead, Warner offers him a series of increasingly bizarre surveillance assignments. As Daniel starts to unravel the secrets behind the requests, he must determine if Warner is out to further his career or ruin his life.
Play trailer1:59
1 Video
13 Photos
Mystery

A struggling young artist meets a mysterious and wealthy benefactor, who offers him a series of increasingly bizarre surveillance assignments.A struggling young artist meets a mysterious and wealthy benefactor, who offers him a series of increasingly bizarre surveillance assignments.A struggling young artist meets a mysterious and wealthy benefactor, who offers him a series of increasingly bizarre surveillance assignments.

  • Director
    • Nenad Cicin-Sain
  • Writers
    • Nenad Cicin-Sain
    • Richard N. Gladstein
  • Stars
    • Frank Langella
    • Wes Bentley
    • Sarah Paulson
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    5.4/10
    922
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Nenad Cicin-Sain
    • Writers
      • Nenad Cicin-Sain
      • Richard N. Gladstein
    • Stars
      • Frank Langella
      • Wes Bentley
      • Sarah Paulson
    • 9User reviews
    • 20Critic reviews
    • 29Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 1 win total

    Videos1

    Theatrical Trailer
    Trailer 1:59
    Theatrical Trailer

    Photos12

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    + 7
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    Top cast13

    Edit
    Frank Langella
    Frank Langella
    • Warner Dax
    Wes Bentley
    Wes Bentley
    • Daniel
    Sarah Paulson
    Sarah Paulson
    • Sarah
    Ahna O'Reilly
    Ahna O'Reilly
    • Olivia
    Jeremy Allen White
    Jeremy Allen White
    • Gus
    Corey Stoll
    Corey Stoll
    • Eric
    Gina Gallego
    Gina Gallego
    • Anjelica
    Ivan Shaw
    Ivan Shaw
    • Officer
    Mila Brener
    Mila Brener
    • Winona
    Sandra Seacat
    Sandra Seacat
    • Annette
    Aiden Lovekamp
    Aiden Lovekamp
    • Marco
    Megan Kuhlmann
    Megan Kuhlmann
    • Nurse
    Thurn Hoffman
    • Henry
    • Director
      • Nenad Cicin-Sain
    • Writers
      • Nenad Cicin-Sain
      • Richard N. Gladstein
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews9

    5.4922
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    Featured reviews

    10mandikat2000

    An artfully shot film exploring the psyche of a painter balancing family and art

    The Time Being is a meditation and a gentle character study. The director manages to capture a mood without too much dialogue. Frank Langella is as usual masterful in the role of a dying man who commissions a down-on-his-luck painter (Wes Bentley), sending him on strange assignments filming sunrises, sunsets and children playing in a playground. The mystery eventually reveals itself leading the painter to seek balance between his family life and his art. The visuals and production design are stunning as are the transitions of swirling paint in water. I saw this film at the Toronto Film Festival and the audience response was very positive. This is an art-house film that won't disappoint.
    8cekadah

    Art cinema about artist creating art

    Beautiful photography, beautiful paintings, beautiful filming! But I am afraid if someone doesn't have an intuitive sense or educated background in seeing and comprehending coloration, a sense of space, composition, contrast, texture, and just plain contemplation of beauty; then I do not feel they will appreciate this film.

    From start to finish every frame, scene, setting, motion, etc. of this film is art - fine art. The plot line is secondary to the imagery! Frank Langella as Warner Dax, and Wes Bentley as Daniel are both suffering and failing. Warner Dax suffers the alienation of his family and his declining health. Daniel suffers the inability to provide for his family because his art is failing to sell and his marriage is dissolving. They each escape this suffering through their creative abilities in their own way. Warner hires Daniel to assist him in creating his final painting, but Daniel does not realize this. And Daniel, through his association with Warner finds his way back into his art. The story is easy to follow. What's difficult is seeing how the paintings are an outer expression of their internal selves!

    The end credits in the movie states original paintings created by Eric Zener and Stephen Wright. I would love to see an exhibition of the paintings created for this film. And I would love to see an exhibit of just some motion picture stills! The two actors are just shadows behind the art.

    I'm giving it an 8 because it's beautiful to watch & see. The acting is a bit dry and you just don't care about them.
    3mbs

    not much here after all is said and done

    Frank Langella would very, very much be the reason to see this film, he doesn't disappoint...its the film around him that disappoints. Playing his somewhat usual unusual role of enigmatic rich man asking mysterious favors of a somewhat struggling younger person while hiding his own questionable agenda (see also "The Ninth Gate" and "The Box" among others.) Langella shows up on screen maybe ten minutes in snapping at his maid to go the pharmacy after she literally just said she was going there--- He then follows up with the memorable one liner "Life's a lot less complicated ever since I stopped hearing women talk" Its the kind of irresistible barbed one liner that i love hearing come out of Langella in movies exactly like these, and as he went about describing just exactly what he wanted from the young painter whose time and energy he solicits, I was more then wrapped up in the whole mysterious vibe of the film and quite optimistic.

    Unfortunately the film as a whole seems a lot more interested in the process of painting and saddling Langella with somewhat ominous monologues with grave overtones about the importance of living while doing what you love while you can. I mean the writer/director gives Langella a good reason for doing that but its possible it could've been done in a somewhat less ham fisted way. While the creation of the various canvases that lead Wes Bentley gets to somewhat lovingly paint are tied in nicely with the main plot line, and the repeated close-ups of paint mixing with water are a neat visual motif (i suppose) its definitely not what i went to this movie to see, but its possible that I went to see this because I just wanted to see what nutty thing the Frank Langella character wanted from the younger character this time around.

    What Langella wants is fairly easy to guess and one nice thing on the director's part is that he that he lets Wes Bentley understand almost immediately from the second he sees Sarah Paulson exactly what Langella wanted. The climactic scene of Bentley and Paulson together is nicely effective and reasonably free of the hitting you over the head emotionalism that a lesser director would've went for. When the film ends however you kind of realize that not a whole lot really happened and that the journey that Wes Bently made and the lessons he's supposed to have learned regarding the way he's been living his life don't feel all that true. Even tho i did like the performance of the actress who played his wife (Ahna O'Reily) who i thought did a very effective job showing the frustrations living with this obsessive painter was having on her life during the couple of scenes she was in. (Or as Langella says to Bentley regarding her "Artists can't have families, it takes away from their art") Honestly i just think the film either needed more meat to its rather slim story, or failing that more maybe some more substantial scenes between Bentely and Langella--I'm not entirely sure what this film needed more of but i definitely feel like it needed more of something for it to have felt worth watching and thinking about as a whole but OK.
    10joeyreynoldsny

    Frank langella is award worthy

    I guess we don't have enough interest in films thar require thinking and talking about afterwards ? Maybe one day soon we will accept a smaller audience As quality, rather than the mainstream circus of false ratings, I am no mainstream judge for others but I love the serenity in this movie, Best review these times is the fact that i would watch with a mask and be content to smell my own breath after an omelet with garlic.
    Vincentiu

    precise puzzle

    a great actor. a strange subject. nuances of atmosphere. all as bones and flesh of a movie who can remember Lucian Freud art or American Beauty.it is a film from images and silence. a kind of parable. or only a lesson.Frank Langella is the locomotive of this interesting project. Sarah Paulson - the delicate spice.Wes Bentley- only a silhouette lost in middle of details. it is a beautiful movie. not exactly good. only beautiful. a kind of embroidery, a precise puzzle, a story about choices, maybe, version of Faust pact. the best ingredient - expectation of viewer. the worse - hope to remark Wes Bentley in a special role. but director intuition remains remarkable - Frank Langella is the best and the others, including the script, may be his mirrors.

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      Sarah Paulson and Wes Bentley also star together in American Horror Story (2011).
    • Quotes

      Warner Dax: Well, Daniel, do you have the footage I asked for?

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    FAQ18

    • How long is The Time Being?Powered by Alexa

    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • July 23, 2013 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Назавжди
    • Filming locations
      • Venice, Los Angeles, California, USA
    • Production companies
      • FilmColony
      • Time Picture Company
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $5,274
    • Gross worldwide
      • $5,274
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 25m(85 min)
    • Color
      • Color

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