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IMDbPro

Song One

  • 2014
  • PG-13
  • 1h 26m
IMDb RATING
5.8/10
11K
YOUR RATING
Anne Hathaway and Johnny Flynn in Song One (2014)
After Franny's musician brother Henry is injured and hospitalized in a coma following a car accident, Franny returns home after a long estrangement and begins to use his notebook as a guide to how his life has evolved in her absence. Franny seeks out the musicians and artists Henry loved, in the course of her journey meeting James Forester, his musical idol, whose success and fame belie a shy and private man. As a strong romantic connection develops between Franny and James, the question becomes if love can bloom even under the most adverse circumstances.
Play trailer1:51
4 Videos
35 Photos
DramaMusicRomance

A young woman strikes up a relationship with her ailing brother's favorite musician.A young woman strikes up a relationship with her ailing brother's favorite musician.A young woman strikes up a relationship with her ailing brother's favorite musician.

  • Director
    • Kate Barker-Froyland
  • Writer
    • Kate Barker-Froyland
  • Stars
    • Anne Hathaway
    • Johnny Flynn
    • Ben Rosenfield
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    5.8/10
    11K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Kate Barker-Froyland
    • Writer
      • Kate Barker-Froyland
    • Stars
      • Anne Hathaway
      • Johnny Flynn
      • Ben Rosenfield
    • 44User reviews
    • 46Critic reviews
    • 48Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 1 nomination total

    Videos4

    Official Trailer
    Trailer 1:51
    Official Trailer
    Song One: Fanmail
    Clip 1:50
    Song One: Fanmail
    Song One: Fanmail
    Clip 1:50
    Song One: Fanmail
    Song One: Favorite Places
    Clip 1:40
    Song One: Favorite Places
    Song One: Afraid Of Heights
    Clip 1:13
    Song One: Afraid Of Heights

    Photos34

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    Top cast53

    Edit
    Anne Hathaway
    Anne Hathaway
    • Franny
    Johnny Flynn
    Johnny Flynn
    • James
    Ben Rosenfield
    Ben Rosenfield
    • Henry
    Faiza Mouha Abbazi
    • Bride
    Fatiha Zifri
    • Henna Artist
    Mina Eddabal
    • Bride's Mother
    Nadia Mssoubri
    • Bride's Sister
    Ali Mssoubri
    • Jeep Driver
    Mary Steenburgen
    Mary Steenburgen
    • Karen
    Peter Francis James
    Peter Francis James
    • Neurosurgeon
    Erin Darke
    Erin Darke
    • James Forester Hugging Fan
    Elizabeth Ziman
    • Accordion Player
    Ian Felice
    • The Felice Brothers
    James Felice
    • The Felice Brothers
    Gregory Farley
    • The Felice Brothers
    • (as Greg Farley)
    Josh Rawson
    • The Felice Brothers
    Alexandra Stewart
    • Musician in Henry's Video
    Gideon Glick
    Gideon Glick
    • Everett
    • Director
      • Kate Barker-Froyland
    • Writer
      • Kate Barker-Froyland
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews44

    5.810.5K
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    10

    Featured reviews

    JohnDeSando

    Some sexy folk songs, then formula.

    "Logically, when you talking' about folk music and blues, you find out it's music of just plain people." Brownie McGhee

    Hardly-plain Anne Hathaway has a camera -ready head with a perfectly coiffed pixie and larger-than life lips. Good thing because Song One spends most of its 96 minutes caressing it while she moons over a folk singer. Yep, it's a romance but still not a bad one. Compared to John Carney's Once, however, it's a one note song. Considering it's writer-director Kate Barker-Froyland's debut film, it's a winner for her because of the promise it shows.

    The Nicholas Sparks-like teary tropes are there: For instance, her folk singing brother, Henry (Ben Rosenfield), is in a coma while her mother (Mary Steenburgen) is eccentric and Franny (Hathaway) has been estranged from her and her brother . Enter heartthrob folksinger James Forester (Johnny Flynn), who sings sexy naturalistic songs and wins doctoral candidate Franny's heart.

    The good part of this cliché is that the love grows organically, not swiftly or too cutely. Although his singing is seductive and his look shaggy handsome, he's playing down his charisma, and that angle makes Franny too low-key and mom almost hyper when she's not quite that.

    Jenny Lewis and Jonathan Rice's music is sweet and longing, accessible for those not enamored of the folk genre. Unfortunately, the music is frequently melancholic to the extreme.

    The film's strength is the organic growth of the romance and the organic neo-folk musical style that moves from street singing to full house concerts with equal grace. The weakness, however, is that nothing much else happens. For those who like authentic love stories, Song One can be first in their hearts while the rest of the audience can watch Walk the Line for some real musical drama.

    "All music is folk music. I ain't never heard a horse sing a song." Louis Armstrong
    5shawneofthedead

    Amiable but underwhelming, hitting as many bum notes as good ones.

    A pleasant if not especially memorable indie, Song One would have slipped completely under the radar and off the grid if not for Anne Hathaway, its star and producer. Hathaway's name alone - not to mention her singing chops, as demonstrated to Oscar-winning effect in Les Miserables - would have brought in audiences eager to hear her sing her heart and soul out again about the horrors of life and men. Here's the thing though: she doesn't sing (much), though her character does experience quite a few ups and downs where the men in her life are concerned. Instead, the film uses its frequent musical interludes to sketch out a sweet if rather underwhelming story of family, loss and connection.

    Franny (Hathaway) is working on her thesis in Morocco when she receives a call from her weeping mother, Karen (Mary Steenburgen) - Henry (Ben Rosenfield), the little brother she barely understands and had stopped speaking to after a fight, is in a coma after a car accident. Returning home to take up a vigil at Henry's bedside, Franny tries to connect with her brother through the music and musicians he loves. As she retraces the path of her brother's life through tiny hole-in-the- wall clubs across New York City, she meets and finds herself drawing closer to James Forrester (Johnny Flynn), Henry's favourite indie musician.

    You can't fault writer-director Kate Barker-Froyland for ambition. She blends three story lines, each capable of carrying its own film, into Song One - there's the heartwrenching family drama about how people must try to survive when death hovers nearby; a quirky romantic comedy about two unlikely souls finding each other; and a brooding treatise on the vagaries of the indie music industry. She mixes and mashes up the ideas and concepts reasonably well, as Henry's coma prompts his sister to explore a world composed of song and lyric - one in which she previously had no interest.

    The first half of the film is grittier and grimmer in tone, buoyed by a pair of sad, weary and very truthful performances from Hathaway and Steenburgen - mother and daughter smarting at the thought of losing Henry, while pushing each other away with all the love in their hearts. The unexpected friendship that Franny develops with James also begins in a charmingly bittersweet fashion - he turns up out of the blue to strum his guitar at Henry's bedside, providing the soundtrack to Franny's desperate pleas for her brother to wake up.

    But Song One unravels a little as it goes on. Gritty gives way to predictable, and it's hard to care as much when the family tragedy takes a backseat to the unfolding romance between Franny and James. This shift in focus isn't helped by the fact that Flynn, who possesses a good singing voice, is a slightly blank presence on screen - he's never outright bad, but it's hard to glean much of James' supposedly sensitive soul from his performance, forcing his words or music to do the job.

    Speaking of the music: the score and original songs by indie rock duo Jenny & Johnny are amiable enough - they've evocative, in parts, but never so catchy as to be really memorable. The exceptions are Afraid Of Heights, a cute little improvised ditty that nicely sums up the relationship between Franny and James; Silver Song, a heartfelt number that ties itself in quite effective, heartbreaking fashion into the narrative; and Little Yellow Dress, which sports lyrics so strange that the song threatens to jolt viewers right out of the film.

    Like the deeply earnest clutch of indie songs that form its soundtrack, Song One is a largely pleasant, if not entirely pleasing, experience. The film hints at depth and layers that don't quite bear up under scrutiny. At least Barker-Froyland doesn't descend completely into mawkish predictability in the final frames, instead bringing the film to a close on a sweetly tentative note that could hold as much grief as hope. It's an ending (or, perhaps, a beginning) that makes the entire journey worth it - almost.
    10integralmassagetherapy

    Beautiful and Poetic.....Quiet and Honest

    I am quite amazed at the bad reviews. This is one of the most beautiful movies I have seen in some time. Incredibly well acted...exceptional music and performances. The sensibility of this film is so unique.Poetic in its delivery, it doesn't just hand you every emotion. You actually have to tap in and feel them for yourself. For me this movie does so effortlessly. Thank you for making this film. I bought it and will watch it often.
    Gordon-11

    Such a bore

    This film tells the story of a woman whose musician brother got hit by a car and became comatose. In the process of grieving, she becomes more than friends with the brother's favourite singer.

    The Chinese title of this film in Hong Kong is "New York Love Chords", so I would be excused to think it's a romantic comedy involving music. The film turns or to be a sombre offering, with Anne Hathaway and Johnny Flynn saying sorry for each other on numerous occasions. The pace is slow, and nothing happens in the film. Anne Hathaway is quite good in the film, but I'm quite surprised by Johnny Flynn's portrayal of a very shy, bordering on socially awkward musician. Not only does his character appear lacking in confidence, he could not even hold eye contact with the person he's talking to. I can't believe he's the same charismatic guy in "Clouds of Sils Maria" that I watched just two days ago.

    "Song One" turns out to be a great bore. I wish I didn't bother watching it.
    7cekadah

    A film for Anne Hathaway enthusiast

    Director/writer Kate Barker-Froyland has offered up a deliciously simple yet emotionally complex story of a family drawn together by an unfortunate accident. Karen (mother), Franny (daughter), are forced to reexamine their family status due to Henry's (son/brother) near death accident.

    Most of the movie/story is Franny learning about her brother through his notes and songs and interest in other singers and places he visits in NYC. Along the way through this path of discovery Franny meets and falls in love with a folk singer her brother admired.

    There are lots & lots of Anne Hathaway face closeups and lots & lots of folk songs. I like Hathaway but the many closeups and folk songs wore a bit thin. That's the reason for the 7 in stars.

    Otherwise this is a fine and thoughtful movie with excellent photography and production values. Please be aware of the lighting throughout as I do believe this is integral to setting the mood of many scenes.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      Scott Avett of The Avett Brothers auditioned for the role of James Forester. Avett told Rolling Stone that for his audition, he read an emotional scene with Anne Hathaway: "It's an emotional scene, and Anne starts welling up in tears. I was like, 'Oh my God. How is she doing that?' It was obvious to me that I was out of my league."
    • Quotes

      James Forester: You know when you have a feeling that you don't want to fade away, but you don't really know how to keep it?

    • Soundtracks
      Bulb Went Black
      Written by Jenny Lewis (Deprecious Music, BMI) & Johnathan Rice (Point Longstreet Publishing, ASCAP)

      Performed by Johnny Flynn

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    FAQ19

    • How long is Song One?Powered by Alexa

    Details

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    • Release date
      • July 13, 2015 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Official sites
      • Official site
      • Official site (Japan)
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • 紐約安可曲
    • Production companies
      • Worldview Entertainment
      • Lotus Entertainment (I)
      • Marc Platt Productions
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Budget
      • $6,000,000 (estimated)
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $32,251
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $20,200
      • Jan 25, 2015
    • Gross worldwide
      • $408,918
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 26m(86 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby Digital

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