A young man brings his girlfriend to his rural Oregon hometown to introduce her to his family, only for things to go terribly wrong upon arrival.A young man brings his girlfriend to his rural Oregon hometown to introduce her to his family, only for things to go terribly wrong upon arrival.A young man brings his girlfriend to his rural Oregon hometown to introduce her to his family, only for things to go terribly wrong upon arrival.
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I went into the movie thinking it would be a cheesy christmas rom-com (not my cup of tea).
I was positively surprised, because this movie takes on a more serious tone about relationships.
It is a film that discusses relationships in many shapes and forms, and about the leaving of relationships. The change in feelings over time, and the change of persons. These themes and concepts are intricately dealt with and left me as a viewer to remember the messages from this film, even long after I watched it. I can appreciate a film like that.
The Christmas setting is not a overwhelming theme that is pressed on for every penny's worth, but is rather treated as a situation and dilemma for the characters to work around. It leaves the characters in an awkward situation, which is an idea that is explored well.
The Director is young and new, but he is doing a great job and I look forward to any future productions he sets his sights on, and hope that Chandler Riggs will be able to work with him in the future. The teamwork of the cast is seen and sensed in both interviews for the film but also in the film itself.
I do put emphasis on Chandler Riggs' contribution to the film due to him being the reason why I started watching the film in the first place. Seeing him work on a production so different from TWD makes me as a long-time fan of his, proud and excited. He is doing great in his role as Ben in this film. Well done!
I recommend this film! Highly! And hope you watch it! A 6.3 rating is lower than it deserves. From me, its an 8.
I was positively surprised, because this movie takes on a more serious tone about relationships.
It is a film that discusses relationships in many shapes and forms, and about the leaving of relationships. The change in feelings over time, and the change of persons. These themes and concepts are intricately dealt with and left me as a viewer to remember the messages from this film, even long after I watched it. I can appreciate a film like that.
The Christmas setting is not a overwhelming theme that is pressed on for every penny's worth, but is rather treated as a situation and dilemma for the characters to work around. It leaves the characters in an awkward situation, which is an idea that is explored well.
The Director is young and new, but he is doing a great job and I look forward to any future productions he sets his sights on, and hope that Chandler Riggs will be able to work with him in the future. The teamwork of the cast is seen and sensed in both interviews for the film but also in the film itself.
I do put emphasis on Chandler Riggs' contribution to the film due to him being the reason why I started watching the film in the first place. Seeing him work on a production so different from TWD makes me as a long-time fan of his, proud and excited. He is doing great in his role as Ben in this film. Well done!
I recommend this film! Highly! And hope you watch it! A 6.3 rating is lower than it deserves. From me, its an 8.
In the long and mostly undistinguished canon of holiday films, Breakup Season shines brightly and sweetly. While far from an obvious holiday film, the message of treating a stranger warmly and well despite her injury to your family member speaks meaningfully about the true holiday spirit. My one critique is that I think the breakup needed more background and narrative support to seem realistic. But this is a minor issue to the overall excellence of the film. I also found that the film's treatment of Le Grande OR made the town almost a character in the narrative of the film. As a first time director, Tracey has delivered a moving film. I look forward to watching his film career develop.
This is one of my favorite films!! I saw it the first time during Atlanta's Cobb Film Festival, close to Mr. Riggs original film/home base. I had a relationship breakup myself, days before Christmas '23 and this was the catharsis I needed. And an all-around great production. Genius concept/writing/direction by Nelson Tracey and a superb cast who worked magically together! I could watch this one over and over. The setting involves Christmas, and it focuses on a very real phenomena, a strange curiosity in itself, that a very high percentage of breakups occur around the holidays. But I don't think of it as a Christmas film. However I'm sure that it will go down as one of the top ten "relationship films" of all time. Technically, it's a psychodrama, and Tracey and the cast beautifully bring to life a story that pulls the viewer into the very real pain and stress surrounding such a scenario. Do not expect your typical fluffy feel-good mindless romantic comedy. What it does is a lean toward film realism that presents a real-life socially-emotionally torturous representation of a breakup, like the real thing. It's important to note that Tracey insisted on filming this in some secluded icy location in the middle of nowhere, in order to bring it to life! I can just hear film professors lecturing about this years from now. But then it leads us out of that torture and extreme awkwardness, step by step, to a place where everyone survives and life moves on. And instead of "Omg will they get back together?", we're left with the reality that Every character Will grow, become more mature, and they will evolve. And that's life brothers and sisters.
Yes the name of this movie should've been stupid breakup cause that's what it is , the lead girl breaks up with the lead guy for the stupidest reason and I get it if hes a jerk but he's not and when she has the nicest guy wanting to be with her and why she's leaving him? Bc she wants space so ok that's all she has to say to him but instead she's acting all traumatized as if she's been attacked physically.
The lead girl was also very rude to liz when she's telling her abt her bf issues as if she doesn't want to listen to her.
The other issue is that it could've been a really good movie except for the boring main leads but the convos are very long and dont keep your attention. No intensity except the first dinner scene.
The lead girl was also very rude to liz when she's telling her abt her bf issues as if she doesn't want to listen to her.
The other issue is that it could've been a really good movie except for the boring main leads but the convos are very long and dont keep your attention. No intensity except the first dinner scene.
When watching indie films, I admit I am overly critical. The truth is, I grew up watching and experiencing studio-backed films with limitless budgets that captured the best effects, talent, story, and sound. I never thought much about how they got there or what was involved in the process.
Now that my child is studying and creating films, I am hyper aware of what each project involves. The sweat-equity far outweighs the budget and that makes me want to love each indie film I see. I want them all to succeed because I know they stem from passion, perseverance, and a desire to showcase a worthwhile product. But they are not all worthy of accolades. In fact, much like seeing someone else's kid in a middle school performance, some of the indie films I've seen are downright hard to watch for their lack of meeting my snobby, mainstream moviegoing standards.
Breakup Season was one of the rare gems in the indie film genre that was an absolute pleasure to watch. The story was raw and real. The locations were ideal and picturesque. The sound (my biggest pet peeve) was well done, and the music compilation was brilliant. The quality of the editing was impressive. Best of all, the acting was lovely, relatable, and inspiring. Well done EVERYONE involved in the making and production of this film.
Breakup Season is a movie that will touch your heart, make you laugh and cry, and remind you of why family - quirky though they be - is the foundation of love.
Now that my child is studying and creating films, I am hyper aware of what each project involves. The sweat-equity far outweighs the budget and that makes me want to love each indie film I see. I want them all to succeed because I know they stem from passion, perseverance, and a desire to showcase a worthwhile product. But they are not all worthy of accolades. In fact, much like seeing someone else's kid in a middle school performance, some of the indie films I've seen are downright hard to watch for their lack of meeting my snobby, mainstream moviegoing standards.
Breakup Season was one of the rare gems in the indie film genre that was an absolute pleasure to watch. The story was raw and real. The locations were ideal and picturesque. The sound (my biggest pet peeve) was well done, and the music compilation was brilliant. The quality of the editing was impressive. Best of all, the acting was lovely, relatable, and inspiring. Well done EVERYONE involved in the making and production of this film.
Breakup Season is a movie that will touch your heart, make you laugh and cry, and remind you of why family - quirky though they be - is the foundation of love.
Did you know
- TriviaFeature debut of writer and director H. Nelson Tracey.
- How long is Breakup Season?Powered by Alexa
Details
Box office
- Gross US & Canada
- $25,088
- Opening weekend US & Canada
- $7,417
- Nov 17, 2024
- Gross worldwide
- $25,088
- Runtime1 hour 42 minutes
- Color
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