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Love is Strange

Original title: Love Is Strange
  • 2014
  • Tous publics
  • 1h 34m
IMDb RATING
6.7/10
14K
YOUR RATING
Alfred Molina and John Lithgow in Love is Strange (2014)
After Ben and George get married, George is fired from his teaching post, forcing them to stay with friends separately while they sell their place and look for cheaper housing -- a situation that weighs heavily on all involved.
Play trailer2:13
9 Videos
44 Photos
DramaRomance

After Ben and George get married, George is fired from his teaching post, forcing them to stay with friends separately while they sell their place and look for cheaper housing -- a situation... Read allAfter Ben and George get married, George is fired from his teaching post, forcing them to stay with friends separately while they sell their place and look for cheaper housing -- a situation that weighs heavily on all involved.After Ben and George get married, George is fired from his teaching post, forcing them to stay with friends separately while they sell their place and look for cheaper housing -- a situation that weighs heavily on all involved.

  • Director
    • Ira Sachs
  • Writers
    • Ira Sachs
    • Mauricio Zacharias
  • Stars
    • John Lithgow
    • Alfred Molina
    • Marisa Tomei
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.7/10
    14K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Ira Sachs
    • Writers
      • Ira Sachs
      • Mauricio Zacharias
    • Stars
      • John Lithgow
      • Alfred Molina
      • Marisa Tomei
    • 79User reviews
    • 159Critic reviews
    • 82Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 2 wins & 24 nominations total

    Videos9

    Theatrical Trailer
    Trailer 2:13
    Theatrical Trailer
    #1
    Trailer 2:11
    #1
    #1
    Trailer 2:11
    #1
    'Love Is Strange' - Secrets of Movie Magic with John Lithgow
    Clip 0:48
    'Love Is Strange' - Secrets of Movie Magic with John Lithgow
    Clip
    Clip 1:05
    Clip
    Clip
    Clip 1:11
    Clip
    Love Is Strange: Painting
    Clip 1:04
    Love Is Strange: Painting

    Photos44

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    + 39
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    Top cast54

    Edit
    John Lithgow
    John Lithgow
    • Ben Hull
    Alfred Molina
    Alfred Molina
    • George Garea
    Marisa Tomei
    Marisa Tomei
    • Kate Hull
    Charlie Tahan
    Charlie Tahan
    • Joey
    Tatyana Zbirovskaya
    • Zlata
    Olya Zueva
    Olya Zueva
    • Eugenia
    Jason Stuart
    Jason Stuart
    • Officiant
    Darren E. Burrows
    Darren E. Burrows
    • Elliot
    • (as Darren Burrows)
    Harriet Sansom Harris
    Harriet Sansom Harris
    • Honey
    • (as Harriet Harris)
    Cheyenne Jackson
    Cheyenne Jackson
    • Ted
    Manny Perez
    Manny Perez
    • Roberto
    Christina Kirk
    Christina Kirk
    • Mindy
    John Cullum
    John Cullum
    • Father Raymond
    Eric Tabach
    Eric Tabach
    • Vlad
    Tank Burt
    Tank Burt
    • Doreen
    Daphne Gaines
    Daphne Gaines
    • Linda
    Christopher King
    • Lawyer
    Maryann Urbano
    • Social Worker
    • Director
      • Ira Sachs
    • Writers
      • Ira Sachs
      • Mauricio Zacharias
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews79

    6.713.6K
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    Featured reviews

    6larry41onEbay

    Nearly as good as the 1937 version, Make Way For Tomorrow Dir. By Leo McCarey!

    My wife and I were both moved and touched by this sweet sad drama of romance near the end of life's long and winding road. When a couple really complete each other's life it is a joy even when things turn rougher because that very important someone is there, next to you to divide the sorrows and multiply the joys.

    But when circumstances beyond their control force them to separate briefly friends and families who offered to help become tested, tried and like most of us will fail at some point.

    We are big fans of John Lithgow (we grew up near his home town and he's a local legend) and the great Alfred Molina and Marisa Tomei. The script, direction and performances were all like the music and art used in the film – wonderfully filling in all the colors of life.

    As for it being a remake, the great comedy director Leo McCarey (Laurel & Hardy films, the Cary Grant screwball comedy The Awful Truth, An Affair To Remember, etc.) wanted to make a film about the problems of old age. Here is the plot description of Make Way For Tomorrow (1937), "At a family reunion, the Cooper clan find that their parents' home is being foreclosed. "Temporarily," Ma moves in with son George's family, Pa with daughter Cora. But the parents are like sand in the gears of their middle-aged children's well regulated households. As the days become weeks and then months, everyone gets stretched until they must except being separated permanently and go out for one last fling before saying goodbye forever."

    Both films are wonderful dramas that ask us to treat each other with more compassion and civility – and to be prepared for the end.

    Leo McCarey was nominated for an Oscar eight times and when he won Best Director in 1937 for The Awful Truth in his acceptance speech he said thank you but it was for the wrong film (meaning he thought he should have won for the more important feature Make Way For Tomorrow.)

    I recommend seeing them both and then go and hug everyone you know and cherish while you can.
    8kosmasp

    Everything is strange

    It doesn't say in the title, but it's not "only" love that is depicted here. And while many issues would have been similar, we get treated to gay love and what that means to the people (friends, family & other relatives or people connected somehow) to our two main characters in this one.

    Lithgow and Molina also are elderly. It's not like they play something they are not and it's rich roles they get here. But everyone in the supporting cast is phenomenal too. Most of the things are understated, things are not always spoken or said in a dialog. The acting is so good, that looks are more than sufficient to tell us the story. And even when the dialog does not tell us the what the character is feeling exactly, we always know.

    Great script and great drama of married life in a big city. The question is, if you're interested in a story like that ... if you are, you'll love this movie. If not, don't bother watching
    7ferguson-6

    Nothing Strange About This

    Greetings again from the darkness. In a remarkable opening 6 to 8 minutes, we see John Lithgow and Alfred Molina prepare for, execute, and celebrate their official marriage after almost 40 years together. During this sequence, we quickly understand that Ben (Lithgow) is the emotional one, and George (Molina) is the pragmatic, balanced one. The brief ceremony is filled with love, admiration and happiness, and leaves us with no doubt that these two are dedicated to each other.

    Director Ira Sachs (Married Life, 2007) also co-wrote the script with Mauricio Zacharias, and the film excels while Lithgow and Molina are on screen together. It comes across as a contemporary version of the 1937 Leo McCarey film Make Way For Tomorrow (with Beulah Bondi) and highlights the obstacles faced by an elderly couple who face financial hardships, New York real estate misery, and the not-so-welcome generosity of friends and family.

    The gay component is not played up, rather the story is told in straight-forward manner as the couple is split up, and deals with loneliness and unease as they feel out of place living in a party house with friends (Molina) and sharing a bunk bed with a typically awkward teenage boy played by Charlie Tahan. The boy's parents are Marisa Tomei and Darren Burrows, who face their own marriage and parental issues.

    The happiness of the opening wedding ceremony quickly dissipates into misery for all characters. The only happy people are the grown men playing a Game of Thrones board game. Literally everyone else is unhappy, or at least disinterested.

    Although conflict is ever-present, the Catholic Church is the closest to a real villain. John Curran plays a Priest in the terrific scene in which Molina is fired (because of his wedding) from his Catholic School teaching job. The poor town of Poughkeepsie takes a couple of shots as well, but mostly it's the pent-up frustrations of Tomei, the passive-aggressive approach of a few other characters, and the crazy teenage mood swings of Tahan's character that keep Ben, George, and we as viewers quite uncomfortable. See this one for the performances of Lithgow and Molina, and for the beautiful Chopin piano throughout.
    8lasttimeisaw

    a brutally honest take on senility and appeals for an authentic mutual esteem

    This Ira Sachs' follow-up of his strained relationship chronicle KEEP THE LIGHTS ON (2012) revolves around a senior gay couple in Manhattan, New York, Ben (Lithgow), an obscure painter and George (Molina), a music teacher in a Catholic school, after gay-marriage has been legalised, they finally tie the knot after 39 years together, their love has been blessed by friends and family, but the segueing repercussions cost George his post due to the obvious prejudice among those religious conservatives, and the unforeseen financial plight forces them to sell the apartment and live with their relatives and friends, yet as none of them have extra rooms for both, so they have to spend the transitional time separately.

    The story unwinds with both encounter difficulties in their provisional homes, Ben is living with his nephew Elliot (Burrows), a photographer, his writer wife Kate (Tomei) and their teenage son Joey (Tahan), his inconvenient intrusion already ruffles Joey's feathers as they have to share a same room with a double bunk, moreover, the co-existence slowly but surely also tests the limitation of Kate's patience. In another side, George becomes a couch-surfer in their friends Ted (Jackson) and Roberto (Perez)'s apartment, however, the unashamed cliché is they are frequent home-party throwers, even when they have a friend sleeping on their couch.

    Their situations are not too rosy, but admirably Sachs doesn't plunge the usual melodrama between them, after being each other's soul-mate and life-partners for such a long time, they reach the mutual coordination of understanding, respect and support, the story itself transcends the gay setting and sublimates into a hymn to universal love which only those very few can actually acquire in reality. Thanks to Lithgow and Molina's unforced but extremely moving performances, which potently fuels the final revelation with utter poignancy, and pretty unusually, in an extraordinary way. Rather than a tearjerker, the film more inclines to be a worshipper of love and respect even when in the time of loss, through a subplot of Joey's own wayward pubertal rebellion, we have the chance to glance at the real problem inside straight people's gay-friendly facade, the fight for equality and against discrimination is a protracted battle and there is no time for slackening.

    I should also name-check Tomei for her brilliant turn as Kate, gallantly runs the full gamut from the one who gifts them an affecting ode about how Ben and George are exemplars of love for her and Elliot, to her final scene of a hysterical flare-up to vent her frustration and dissatisfaction, she is truly amazing.

    Under the pervasion of classical music pieces, LOVE IS STRANGE is alternately heart- warming, heart-touching and heart-rending, Ira Sachs perfects his narrative strategy with more self-control and less on-the-nose intensity, and it turns out to be an unheralded gem not just from the viewpoint of LGBT genre, but a brutally honest take on senility and appeals for an authentic mutual esteem among each and every soul on the earth.
    6dglink

    Lithgow and Molina Shine in Downbeat Story

    New Yorkers Ben and George have been together nearly 40 years, when they marry during a joyous gathering of friends and relatives. Unfortunately, George works for a Catholic school, and he is quickly dismissed when news of his recent nuptials reaches the Church hierarchy. The aging couple can no longer afford their condo and, forced to sell, face difficulties finding a reasonable apartment. Thus, Ben and George separate temporarily to live with relatives, and the expected problems ensue.

    "Love is Strange" has many things going for it, primarily in the performances of John Lithgow as Ben, Alfred Molina as George, and Marisa Tomei as Kate, the wife of Ben's nephew. Lithgow and Molina capture the familiarity and tenderness of a long-married couple, while the always-engaging Tomei is excellent as a writer, whose work is constantly interrupted by Uncle Ben's well-meaning, but intrusive conversation. Unfortunately, the shaggy-dog script by Ira Sachs and Mauricio Zacharias does not serve the talented cast well. The screenplay shuffles some significant events off screen and leaves enough threads dangling to weave a carpet. Random coincidence resolves one plot point, while others are just left unanswered. Sachs also directs, and his long takes seem self-consciously arty. The film appears to be ending several times before it actually does.

    While the credits roll, question after question will rise in viewers' minds. After nearly 40 years together, why did George and Ben have no savings? George signed an agreement when he was hired and knew the consequences, why did he not keep his marriage quiet? Why was George so clueless about the costs of selling the condo? What was the big deal about moving to Poughkeepsie temporarily? Why was the friend, Honey, dismissed from a conversation with a sharp "you're not family?" Why did the relatives discuss the couple's living situation behind their backs and not openly with them? Perhaps an intended longer version was chopped down, although, at 94 minutes, "Love is Strange" is relatively short. Whatever the reason, the film is a botched opportunity that squanders some talented performers and an intriguing premise.

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    Related interests

    Mahershala Ali and Alex R. Hibbert in Moonlight (2016)
    Drama
    Ingrid Bergman and Humphrey Bogart in Casablanca (1942)
    Romance

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Ben's paintings were done by painter Boris Torres, who is also director Ira Sachs' husband.
    • Goofs
      When George advises the young girl playing a Frédéric Chopin piece on the piano (supposedly without sufficient feeling), that she should let the music take her somewhere, surprise or even overwhelm her, he says that this is as important as "knowing the difference between a half-step and a semitone". Fact is, a half-step IS a semitone; there is no difference at all.
    • Quotes

      George: I believe the world is a better place if people aren't lying.

    • Connections
      Featured in The Nostalgia Critic: Does PG Mean Anything Anymore? (2016)
    • Soundtracks
      Berceuse in D-Flat Major, Op. 57
      Written by Frédéric Chopin

      Performed by Idil Biret

      Courtesy of Naxos of America, Inc.

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    FAQ19

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • November 12, 2014 (France)
    • Countries of origin
      • United States
      • Greece
    • Official sites
      • Official Facebook
      • Official Twitter
    • Languages
      • English
      • Russian
    • Also known as
      • Love Is Strange
    • Filming locations
      • New York City, New York, USA
    • Production companies
      • Parts and Labor
      • Faliro House Productions
      • Film50
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $2,262,223
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $117,276
      • Aug 24, 2014
    • Gross worldwide
      • $3,057,388
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 34m(94 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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