A suburban dad falls hard for his charismatic new neighbor.A suburban dad falls hard for his charismatic new neighbor.A suburban dad falls hard for his charismatic new neighbor.
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Featured reviews
Story ~ ⭐ 5.5/10
The writer forgot to close some story lines, and when you do that, you leave the audience wanting. The movie is a negative character arc for both Robinson and Rudd, and that's depressing, especially without meaning or something else to grab onto. Yes, it was funny, at times, but it was drowned out by a sea of not enough audience payoff. Clever ending, not really.
Acting ~ ⭐ 7.0/10
Robinson is doing Robinson and Rudd is doing Rudd. Expanding on Rudd, it seems he has some acting tic he can't shake that's turned him into a cliché; it's something in his face, like an invisible string keeps him from doing something different. At times, Robinson's slapstick, especially the scene with the Vietnam hat-wearing overactor, degenerated into a yelling match that should have been left with the editor. My 7 for acting is generous, thanks to Kate Mara, who delivered the most talent and nuance by far.
Cinematography ~ ⭐ 7.5/10
Nothing special here, but not bad either. Sorry, I can't offer more.
Recommendation: This is uncomfortable, awkward humor. If you like that, rent it, but pass on the theater run.
The writer forgot to close some story lines, and when you do that, you leave the audience wanting. The movie is a negative character arc for both Robinson and Rudd, and that's depressing, especially without meaning or something else to grab onto. Yes, it was funny, at times, but it was drowned out by a sea of not enough audience payoff. Clever ending, not really.
Acting ~ ⭐ 7.0/10
Robinson is doing Robinson and Rudd is doing Rudd. Expanding on Rudd, it seems he has some acting tic he can't shake that's turned him into a cliché; it's something in his face, like an invisible string keeps him from doing something different. At times, Robinson's slapstick, especially the scene with the Vietnam hat-wearing overactor, degenerated into a yelling match that should have been left with the editor. My 7 for acting is generous, thanks to Kate Mara, who delivered the most talent and nuance by far.
Cinematography ~ ⭐ 7.5/10
Nothing special here, but not bad either. Sorry, I can't offer more.
Recommendation: This is uncomfortable, awkward humor. If you like that, rent it, but pass on the theater run.
When it comes to the topic of the male psyche and what inherently makes us male, the usual trope falls into the typical realm of heroism, stoicism and aggression. You can't get that woman you like unless you are willing to take on an army and exhibit confidence in the moment. Trouble is, the so-called man that needs that confidence is played by men like Henry Cavil or Ryan Gosling, not some every day run of the mill man.
Much like another film that tackled the male psyche that came out last year, that being A Different Man, Friendship tackles another side of the equation. While A Different Man dealt with identity and accepting your true self, Friendship is a bizarre comedy tackling why it is so hard to make friends. Tim Robinson plays Craig Waterman, a lonely, somewhat self centered man who has no filter and extremely poor social skills. He lacks emotional maturity and also self awareness about his grating personality. It's hard to imagine how he got married and stayed so for 16 years, but that is besides the point. We get a sense that Craig's schtick has grown tired as his wife is visibly having an emotional affair with an old ex and his son is becoming more and more distant. His lack of self awareness is meant to illustrate his loneliness is not because of awkwardness or because of social anxiety, but because his personality is completely devoid of modern mores. The good thing is the film doesn't blame this attitude due to a condition or due to past trauma, we are to assume he has always been this way. Then he meets Austin, played with usual charm by Paul Rudd.
In a lot of ways, Austin is the ideal man when we first meet him. Self assured, smooth and free. Unlike the corporatized Craig, he introduces a new world to Craig filled with friendship, connection and emotional availability. Trouble is, Craig is ill prepared to morph into this world of friendship. His mental state declines, all the while seeing how a man should deal with the pressures society puts on some men. While Austin struggles at first with his new change in life, he ultimately evens out and finds a way to deal with his promotion at work... like an actualized and emotional mature man should act. Craig on the other hand descends into an immature boy, seeking out creature comforts and trying to recapture an older version of himself rather than dealing with a new and evolving situation.
The final act is where much of Craig's disintegration occurs. He even states men shouldn't even have friends to begin with. Of course, this all plays out in a deeply sad string of events for Craig, leading to a shocking finale.
Now, I don't consider this an all encompassing foray into the world or men and how to build friendships, but it certainly is more realistic than another Rudd vehicle like I Love You Man. While much of society dismisses the struggles many men endure, the toughest has to be with male bonding. There is a reason why the alt-right is rife with angry men and some of the worst opinions are held by men. The lack of emotional maturity has made it easy to recruit these types, giving them a support mechanism that becomes "habit forming." Becoming a part of a team and then getting kicked off that team can be gut wrenching to many, especially if you don't have another "team" to jump into. And then you have an example like Craig Waterman, a man with no capability of reading a room and has most likely been hanging on by a thread for years. While I'm a completely different person, I feel his loneliness. Being an atheist tree hugging vegan in a small right wing town that loves hunting and steak, I've been something of a prisoner of my own doing. It's not that I really can't make friends, but who is going to relate to me when I tell a gun loving, fly fishing conservative that I don't eat steak due to an ethical philosophy I adopted years before. How does a man that loves Art, film and philosophy relate to people who aren't as educated on these subjects without coming off as a massive elitist? It would probably be like the moment Austin tells Craig he doesn't want to be friends after a rather awkward and unsettling moment occurs between them.
While Craig is definitely a man forged by his own experiences, you still feel bad for him. It's clear he doesn't fit anywhere in the world, and hence his outbursts become more and more outrageous as he finally understands this. But that is the quandary. Men have been taught individualism so much that it's hard to accept the idea that we are not wrong in our thoughts and we should not adjust our ideals to fit. Even I struggle with that, knowing there are few options for me at any restaurant or public eatery and it's best to just stay at home and make some quinoa and beans. I don't wanna be that guy at the restaurant table that has to ask a million questions about the food prep. Just give me the drink menu and a cheeseless and dressing less side salad. It's even affected my dating life, especially since I am nowhere near a large selection of my own kind and many have predisposed assumptions about me. So yes, in a lot of ways I empathize with Craig, though our own prisons are of different designs. There is also a lot of other things in the film that only men will really get, like our lack of depth in our conversations and the cruelty we may play on outsiders. But that is the male condition unfortunately, and too many of us are stuck on that hamster wheel just trying to deal with a society that continues to be aloof to our own unique problems.
Much like another film that tackled the male psyche that came out last year, that being A Different Man, Friendship tackles another side of the equation. While A Different Man dealt with identity and accepting your true self, Friendship is a bizarre comedy tackling why it is so hard to make friends. Tim Robinson plays Craig Waterman, a lonely, somewhat self centered man who has no filter and extremely poor social skills. He lacks emotional maturity and also self awareness about his grating personality. It's hard to imagine how he got married and stayed so for 16 years, but that is besides the point. We get a sense that Craig's schtick has grown tired as his wife is visibly having an emotional affair with an old ex and his son is becoming more and more distant. His lack of self awareness is meant to illustrate his loneliness is not because of awkwardness or because of social anxiety, but because his personality is completely devoid of modern mores. The good thing is the film doesn't blame this attitude due to a condition or due to past trauma, we are to assume he has always been this way. Then he meets Austin, played with usual charm by Paul Rudd.
In a lot of ways, Austin is the ideal man when we first meet him. Self assured, smooth and free. Unlike the corporatized Craig, he introduces a new world to Craig filled with friendship, connection and emotional availability. Trouble is, Craig is ill prepared to morph into this world of friendship. His mental state declines, all the while seeing how a man should deal with the pressures society puts on some men. While Austin struggles at first with his new change in life, he ultimately evens out and finds a way to deal with his promotion at work... like an actualized and emotional mature man should act. Craig on the other hand descends into an immature boy, seeking out creature comforts and trying to recapture an older version of himself rather than dealing with a new and evolving situation.
The final act is where much of Craig's disintegration occurs. He even states men shouldn't even have friends to begin with. Of course, this all plays out in a deeply sad string of events for Craig, leading to a shocking finale.
Now, I don't consider this an all encompassing foray into the world or men and how to build friendships, but it certainly is more realistic than another Rudd vehicle like I Love You Man. While much of society dismisses the struggles many men endure, the toughest has to be with male bonding. There is a reason why the alt-right is rife with angry men and some of the worst opinions are held by men. The lack of emotional maturity has made it easy to recruit these types, giving them a support mechanism that becomes "habit forming." Becoming a part of a team and then getting kicked off that team can be gut wrenching to many, especially if you don't have another "team" to jump into. And then you have an example like Craig Waterman, a man with no capability of reading a room and has most likely been hanging on by a thread for years. While I'm a completely different person, I feel his loneliness. Being an atheist tree hugging vegan in a small right wing town that loves hunting and steak, I've been something of a prisoner of my own doing. It's not that I really can't make friends, but who is going to relate to me when I tell a gun loving, fly fishing conservative that I don't eat steak due to an ethical philosophy I adopted years before. How does a man that loves Art, film and philosophy relate to people who aren't as educated on these subjects without coming off as a massive elitist? It would probably be like the moment Austin tells Craig he doesn't want to be friends after a rather awkward and unsettling moment occurs between them.
While Craig is definitely a man forged by his own experiences, you still feel bad for him. It's clear he doesn't fit anywhere in the world, and hence his outbursts become more and more outrageous as he finally understands this. But that is the quandary. Men have been taught individualism so much that it's hard to accept the idea that we are not wrong in our thoughts and we should not adjust our ideals to fit. Even I struggle with that, knowing there are few options for me at any restaurant or public eatery and it's best to just stay at home and make some quinoa and beans. I don't wanna be that guy at the restaurant table that has to ask a million questions about the food prep. Just give me the drink menu and a cheeseless and dressing less side salad. It's even affected my dating life, especially since I am nowhere near a large selection of my own kind and many have predisposed assumptions about me. So yes, in a lot of ways I empathize with Craig, though our own prisons are of different designs. There is also a lot of other things in the film that only men will really get, like our lack of depth in our conversations and the cruelty we may play on outsiders. But that is the male condition unfortunately, and too many of us are stuck on that hamster wheel just trying to deal with a society that continues to be aloof to our own unique problems.
Making a name for himself with his particular brand of awkward humour that has served him well on various stand-up specials and Netflix backed series I Think You Should Leave, American comedian Tim Robinson makes the leap to leading man duties in Andrew DeYoung's feature debut that is one of the years most unique propositions.
Working alongside seasoned audience favourite Paul Rudd, Robinson here plays everyday office worker Craig, a softly spoken and floating middle-aged man who has recently been supporting his wife Tami's (a typically strong Kate Mara) cancer journey and see's huge potential with a friendship he has been striving for with his new neighbour Austin (Rudd).
It's a simplistic set-up in principle and one that's been a tried and true narrative starter in a multitude of purely comical or more dramedy centred affairs across the years but with Robinson in the lead and DuYoung committing to making sure his debut is not a cookie-cutter affair, Friendship provides an odd, unexpected, sometimes hilarious sometimes sad journey that is sure to win as many fans as it loses.
Early on in the building block stages of the film and Craig and Austin's budding relationship, Friendship provides a healthy ratio of hearty laughs and awkwardly hilarious hijinks but as we move forward from the initial half hour set-up Friendship enters into darker territory and it's likely that many willing viewers will begin to wilt as Craig's venture into the depths of desperation and poor decision making takes hold over him and the story itself.
It's undeniable that Robinson has a particular range as a performer and you can't see him ever escaping a typecast scenario he has created for himself and is likely content in but for what Friendship required he is a great choice and his back and forwards with Rudd are a real winner for the film with Rudd becoming the perfect foil for Robinson's mannerisms and antics that won't be for everyone but work for what is required here.
The film's fantastic early stretch is sadly never formed into the potential classic genre entry it might have been as things progress and narratively there's some significant gaps in pay-offs and exploration but in a climate where a lot of films of this ilk play it safe or do the bare minimum, its refreshing to watch something like Friendship that's so content being something a little bit different and non-concerned with the towing the line of expectation.
Final Say -
A must-see for any Tim Robinson fans and for anyone willing to take a strange and off-kilter journey into one man's crumbling life, Friendship isn't always an easy film to digest and is as much a drama as it is a comedic trip but it's an intriguing watch throughout and proves there's a place for Robinson in the feature film landscape.
3 1/2 fast moving pigs out of 5.
Working alongside seasoned audience favourite Paul Rudd, Robinson here plays everyday office worker Craig, a softly spoken and floating middle-aged man who has recently been supporting his wife Tami's (a typically strong Kate Mara) cancer journey and see's huge potential with a friendship he has been striving for with his new neighbour Austin (Rudd).
It's a simplistic set-up in principle and one that's been a tried and true narrative starter in a multitude of purely comical or more dramedy centred affairs across the years but with Robinson in the lead and DuYoung committing to making sure his debut is not a cookie-cutter affair, Friendship provides an odd, unexpected, sometimes hilarious sometimes sad journey that is sure to win as many fans as it loses.
Early on in the building block stages of the film and Craig and Austin's budding relationship, Friendship provides a healthy ratio of hearty laughs and awkwardly hilarious hijinks but as we move forward from the initial half hour set-up Friendship enters into darker territory and it's likely that many willing viewers will begin to wilt as Craig's venture into the depths of desperation and poor decision making takes hold over him and the story itself.
It's undeniable that Robinson has a particular range as a performer and you can't see him ever escaping a typecast scenario he has created for himself and is likely content in but for what Friendship required he is a great choice and his back and forwards with Rudd are a real winner for the film with Rudd becoming the perfect foil for Robinson's mannerisms and antics that won't be for everyone but work for what is required here.
The film's fantastic early stretch is sadly never formed into the potential classic genre entry it might have been as things progress and narratively there's some significant gaps in pay-offs and exploration but in a climate where a lot of films of this ilk play it safe or do the bare minimum, its refreshing to watch something like Friendship that's so content being something a little bit different and non-concerned with the towing the line of expectation.
Final Say -
A must-see for any Tim Robinson fans and for anyone willing to take a strange and off-kilter journey into one man's crumbling life, Friendship isn't always an easy film to digest and is as much a drama as it is a comedic trip but it's an intriguing watch throughout and proves there's a place for Robinson in the feature film landscape.
3 1/2 fast moving pigs out of 5.
It's easy to describe this movie to someone who has watched "I THINK YOU SHOULD LEAVE" tv show(with Tim Robinson). FRIENDSHIP is like a 100 minutes episode of this show, less insane/provocative than an average episode,also a bit more entertaining addressing to larger audiences.
However, it's very difficult to describe this to someone who hasn't watched Robinson's tv shows. One might think that it's something like a dark comedy(like THE CABLE GUY) and a satire about male friendship. Or a deconstruction of movies regarding male friendship.
Truth is, even this description doesn't even begin to portray the sheer insanity of this movie. The male friendship is just a pretext, an excuse for all this surrealistic spectacle. This is more Luis Buñuel and Salvador Dalí than "Cable guy". But even Bunuel's movies had a second layer and they had a meaning. FRIENDSHIP has zero meaning or moral lessons or an underlying purpose. This is not about about society, there are no messages here, nothing.
There is a reviewer here named "aciessi" and i think his review is absolutely to the point : "I imagine some people have a lot of trouble explaining Tim Robinson. I think I can. He is the new champion of anti-comedy. Anti-comedy is almost a performance art unto itself and would suggest a uniquely higher level of understanding of what is funny and what is not, and then taking what is not funny and making it funny. It feels almost accidental, but it isn't.".
This.
I liked it a lot, there were many hilarious scenes, for real i would like to watch a 4 hour movie of Robinson. However, this is definitely not for everyone. Many people will call it a bad movie, and i won't even argue. It's not about right and wrong, good taste in movies and bad taste. Tim Robinson's cinematic value " lies in the eyes of the beholder".
However, it's very difficult to describe this to someone who hasn't watched Robinson's tv shows. One might think that it's something like a dark comedy(like THE CABLE GUY) and a satire about male friendship. Or a deconstruction of movies regarding male friendship.
Truth is, even this description doesn't even begin to portray the sheer insanity of this movie. The male friendship is just a pretext, an excuse for all this surrealistic spectacle. This is more Luis Buñuel and Salvador Dalí than "Cable guy". But even Bunuel's movies had a second layer and they had a meaning. FRIENDSHIP has zero meaning or moral lessons or an underlying purpose. This is not about about society, there are no messages here, nothing.
There is a reviewer here named "aciessi" and i think his review is absolutely to the point : "I imagine some people have a lot of trouble explaining Tim Robinson. I think I can. He is the new champion of anti-comedy. Anti-comedy is almost a performance art unto itself and would suggest a uniquely higher level of understanding of what is funny and what is not, and then taking what is not funny and making it funny. It feels almost accidental, but it isn't.".
This.
I liked it a lot, there were many hilarious scenes, for real i would like to watch a 4 hour movie of Robinson. However, this is definitely not for everyone. Many people will call it a bad movie, and i won't even argue. It's not about right and wrong, good taste in movies and bad taste. Tim Robinson's cinematic value " lies in the eyes of the beholder".
The obvious comparison is "I love you man," because of Rudd and some of the other narrative parallels, but I like to think of this as the origin story of the "dangerous nights I used to be a piece of $h!t" guy from I think you should leave.
Robinson strikes just the right balance between doing the things he's known for from ITYSL and Detroiters, and the kind of dark sadness that could only be depicted by someone who had a prior career in advertising (I say this as someone with a current career in advertising).
There's a real undercurrent of existential dread running from start to finish and in the end, they stick the landing on never really knowing what was reality vs fantasy.
It's a strong recommend from me, especially for those who enjoyed Robinson's previous projects, because make no mistake - while the supporting cast (primarily Mara and Rudd) anchors the reality - it's Robinson who sells the surreality required to tie it all together. 8/10.
Robinson strikes just the right balance between doing the things he's known for from ITYSL and Detroiters, and the kind of dark sadness that could only be depicted by someone who had a prior career in advertising (I say this as someone with a current career in advertising).
There's a real undercurrent of existential dread running from start to finish and in the end, they stick the landing on never really knowing what was reality vs fantasy.
It's a strong recommend from me, especially for those who enjoyed Robinson's previous projects, because make no mistake - while the supporting cast (primarily Mara and Rudd) anchors the reality - it's Robinson who sells the surreality required to tie it all together. 8/10.
Theatrical Releases You Can Stream or Rent
Theatrical Releases You Can Stream or Rent
These big screen releases can now be watched from the comfort of your couch.
Did you know
- TriviaAndrew DeYoung claimed in an interview that the movie was inspired from his own experience of getting iced out of a friend group.
- GoofsTony the phone salesman refers to his Toad as the "Buffalo River Toad" but it's actually called the "Colorado River Toad.
- ConnectionsFeatured in Half in the Bag: 2025 Mid-Year Catch-up (2025)
- SoundtracksMarigolds
Written by Donny Dykowsky
Performed by Mirrors on the Moon
Courtesy of The Ski Team and Donny Dykowsky
By arrangement with SoStereo
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Official site
- Language
- Also known as
- Дружба
- Filming locations
- Kings Plaza, Marine Park, Brooklyn, New York, USA(shopping mall)
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
Box office
- Gross US & Canada
- $16,228,274
- Opening weekend US & Canada
- $444,759
- May 11, 2025
- Gross worldwide
- $16,508,013
- Runtime1 hour 40 minutes
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 1.66 : 1
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