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IMDbPro

Appropriate Behavior

  • 2014
  • Not Rated
  • 1h 26m
IMDb RATING
6.5/10
4.9K
YOUR RATING
Desiree Akhavan in Appropriate Behavior (2014)
For Shirin, being part of a perfect Persian family isnÂ’t easy. Acceptance eludes her from all sides: her family doesnÂ’t know sheÂ’s bisexual, and her ex-girlfriend, Maxine, canÂ’t understand why she doesnÂ’t tell them. Even the six-year-old boys in her moviemaking class are too ADD to focus on her for more than a second. Following a family announcement of her brotherÂ’s betrothal to a parentally approved Iranian prize catch, Shirin embarks on a private rebellion involving a series of pansexual escapades, while trying to decipher what went wrong with Maxine.
Play trailer1:54
2 Videos
10 Photos
ComedyDramaRomance

Shirin is struggling to become an ideal Persian daughter, politically correct bisexual, and hip young Brooklynite, but fails miserably in her attempt at all identities. Being without a clich... Read allShirin is struggling to become an ideal Persian daughter, politically correct bisexual, and hip young Brooklynite, but fails miserably in her attempt at all identities. Being without a cliché to hold onto can be a lonely experience.Shirin is struggling to become an ideal Persian daughter, politically correct bisexual, and hip young Brooklynite, but fails miserably in her attempt at all identities. Being without a cliché to hold onto can be a lonely experience.

  • Director
    • Desiree Akhavan
  • Writers
    • Desiree Akhavan
    • Cecilia Frugiuele
  • Stars
    • Desiree Akhavan
    • Rebecca Henderson
    • Halley Feiffer
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.5/10
    4.9K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Desiree Akhavan
    • Writers
      • Desiree Akhavan
      • Cecilia Frugiuele
    • Stars
      • Desiree Akhavan
      • Rebecca Henderson
      • Halley Feiffer
    • 17User reviews
    • 66Critic reviews
    • 73Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 2 wins & 11 nominations total

    Videos2

    Official Trailer
    Trailer 1:54
    Official Trailer
    Appropriate Behavior
    Clip 2:47
    Appropriate Behavior
    Appropriate Behavior
    Clip 2:47
    Appropriate Behavior

    Photos9

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    Top cast39

    Edit
    Desiree Akhavan
    Desiree Akhavan
    • Shirin
    Rebecca Henderson
    Rebecca Henderson
    • Maxine
    Halley Feiffer
    Halley Feiffer
    • Crystal
    Ryan Fitzsimmons
    Ryan Fitzsimmons
    • Brendan
    Anh Duong
    Anh Duong
    • Nasrin
    Hooman Majd
    • Mehrdad
    Arian Moayed
    Arian Moayed
    • Ali
    Justine Cotsonas
    Justine Cotsonas
    • Layli
    Scott Adsit
    Scott Adsit
    • Ken
    Maryann Urbano
    • Jackie
    • (as Maryan Urbano)
    Michael Lonergan
    • Jacques
    Annalisa Graziano
    • Felicia
    D'Monaye D'Jara Careathers
    • Caribbean Nanny
    Jake Katzman
    Jake Katzman
    • Groucho
    Kyle Ty Lewis
    • Kujo
    • (as Kyle Lewis)
    Renzo Masuko
    • Rocko
    Declan Broggy
    • Ren
    Alex Kagan
    • Archie
    • Director
      • Desiree Akhavan
    • Writers
      • Desiree Akhavan
      • Cecilia Frugiuele
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews17

    6.54.9K
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    Featured reviews

    5ReganRebecca

    Self-indulgent Sundance debut

    There's a certain type of movie that Sundance always selects: quirky comedies about lovable oddballs who are in the middle of a crisis and want everyone to know about it. This is Appropriate Behavior. I will say in its favour that there isn't enough bisexual representation in cinema nor is there enough about American- Iranians. This has both, but at the same time writer director Desiree Akhavan doesn't want to examine either aspect in depth. This is both refreshing because these aspects of lead character Shirin's identity are assured aspects of who she is and aren't part of her crisis, and frustrating because aside from these elements there is nothing that makes this movie stand out in any way from the quirky indie comedies that come out every year from Sundance.

    Behavior is about Shirin (played by Akhavan). Recently having broken up with the live-in girlfriend her conservative Persian parents thought was her "roommate" the film plays in pieces as we watch Akhavan try to put her life back together without the woman who defined so much of it. As a bonus we are also treated to flashbacks of the rise and fall of her relationship with her ex. It is... not very exciting.

    The film is written with so many pithy one liners you can tell it was written to death. This makes for great screencaps and dialogue you can use as gif sets but as an overarching script with characterization not so much. The narrative is fairly elegantly sliced and diced so that you get just the right amount of mix of past and present but at the same time... Just who cares? This feels directly aimed at a group of lost 20 somethings stumbling their way through life, but as a lost 20 something myself I'm sick of seeing these kind of movies (always set in NYC!) and the individual scenes don't really do anything for me. There are still some aspects that make this movie watchable: a threesome that goes wrong (I'm always partial to sex scenes that are good and by good I mean manage to maintain the flow of the story. So many movies just have all plot and emotion stop to get a few thrusts in. Akhavan understands how to continue to build the narrative using the sex scene). The ending of the film is very cathartic and pitch perfect as well.

    How Akhavan manages to nail some of the most difficult aspects of filmmaking while flubbing the middle is beyond me. It gives me hope however that she'll continue to improve.
    6bettyguertler

    A slow build

    I was excited to see this indie and for a low budget film in NYC it is quite well done. Being that is was a Sundance film I was expecting something really revelatory. Unfortunately it really wasn't. It took a long time to get going. The whole first half of the film was essentially exposition in the form of complaining. Nothing was really happening to the characters. They weren't doing or experiencing anything. Instead we learn the characters history as she complains about losing her girlfriend to friends and deals with her family dynamic. While none of that is bad per say, it certainly wasn't that engaging.

    The film picks up speed after that and we get to see our lead actually experience things. However the star/writer/director utilizes flashbacks to tell the tale of how she got here, but the cuts backward and forward have no style, they are just cuts. So the film feels awkward and you get confused as to where you are in time too easily. Maybe it was intentional, as the lead is really off kilter as her life is put in shambles. But for this viewer, it didn't really work. You always eventually figure out where the timeline is, but it takes a while into each new scene to know. There are many ways to make flashbacks and jumping around in time work for an audience, but none of them are used and therefore it's all just basic editing and cutting and it feels clunky.

    In conclusion, this is a competent first feature. You have to commend anyone who finishes a feature and does so competently. It isn't a perfect movie, but what is? It could have used some more work with the script and structure. Visually it's fine, but again not a revelation in indie cinematography. Can't really fault them for that though, as you only have just so many locations and it is mostly people talking. If you get too artsy with that it can be detrimental to the simple story being told. If you like indies and new filmmakers you could definitely do worse, but you can also definitely do better. For other films in this vein, millennial, edgy indie, OBVIOUS CHILD is far stronger.
    ciffou

    Entertaining

    I will admit that its weakest part is character development, fleshing out supporting charcters and its pointless ending, however it is entertaining and makes you laugh. I love that it did not take itself seriously and, as a non-white person, you understand where she is coming from in terms of her family, she is not an annoying Hanna from Girls or an annoying Frances Ha. Culture plays a role and, more importantly, there are other characters pointing her flaws, as well. I love that she was bi and in a relationship with a woman and not a cheater. Impressive enough on itself in terms of representation. I just had fun. I only wish the ending were not so meh.
    5rjones64

    A good idea wasted on superficialities.

    "Appropriate Behavior" had all the ingredients I look for in an indie movie. It had characters on the margins of society in Shirin, a bisexual young woman living in New York City and of Iranian descent. It involved locations I will never know well, the aforementioned New York City as seen by the young and tragically hip. It explores a culture of which I'm not a part, that of the young bisexual/gay/lesbian/transgender person living in a big city.

    Etc. etc. etc.

    I was all ready to enjoy the heck out of this film at the Key West Film Festival in November 2014. I even skipped another movie that my group was attending and which sounded great. All so I could see something I normally wouldn't have seen in the theaters.

    I wish I'd gone with my group. Even worse, I managed to talk someone out of going with me instead of with the others and so I felt bad about steering her wrong.

    While the set up was all there, the execution sure wasn't. The main character truly only seemed interested in her own love life and gave no thought, nor screen time to anything else.

    For instance, her brother the doctor seemed to have an interesting side plot going on, but the movie never seemed interested in doing more than teasing the viewers. The main character's coming out to her conservative parents was hinted about and teased, but then given all the pomp and attention of a wet noodle going down the drain.

    Even worse, the main character was supposed to have a lead-in-to-the-third-act epiphany that led to her making changes and sowing the seeds for a happy ending. After our showing ended, the folks in my theater all talked about the movie and none of us had any clue about what the epiphany was supposed to be. Nor could we understand why or how the main character effected the change necessary for that happy ending.

    So many wasted ideas, so little fleshing out done. In the end, there was not enough reason for us to care.

    I gave this a five because I thought the acting and cinematography were relatively professional. Too bad neither were given enough substantial plot nor complications to help them live up to their potential.
    5ferguson-6

    Girls, Boys, Girls and Boys

    Greetings again from the darkness. It's finally here! That is, if you have been anxiously awaiting a twist in the New York hipster Romantic Dramedy genre; and if the twist you want is a semi-autobiographical story of a Persian bi-sexual female whose focus in life is making her ex-partner jealous, while hiding the truth from her own conservative parents.

    Desiree Akhavan is the first time writer/director who also stars as Shirin, the lead character described above. Ms. Akhavan and the movie owe so much to Lena Dunham ("Girls") that the opening credits should have had a placard stating "Inspired by Lena". There is no shame in crediting those who influence one's work. We also see touches of Woody Allen and Nia Vardalos in Akhavan's writing, and Greta Gerwig in her acting style. What we haven't seen before, is an opening scene depicting the leading character breaking up with her partner and walking down the street toting her strap-on.

    Shirin is a twenty-something New Yorker who is insecure and judgmental, cynical yet hopeful, lacking in self-esteem, without any discernible professional talent or social skills, and void of any ambition … other than making her ex, Maxine (Rebecca Henderson) so jealous that she will come running back. Her "plan" is to sleep with many strangers of both sexes until one of these trysts makes Maxine see that she can't live without Shirin. She does all of this while dodging poverty working at a kindergarten teaching filmmaking to 5 year olds. We are told Shirin has a Masters in Journalism, just so we understand she has chosen this path in life.

    As a filmmaker, Ms. Akhavan shows real promise. Her feel and eye for crucial scenes between two people is very strong, though the dialogue could have used some help – many of the one-liners probably sounded funnier in her head than they come across on screen. Her use of flashbacks was especially creative as she juxtaposed good and bad moments of Shirin/Maxine with what's happening at any given moment. The sexual escapades and the unique community of New York hipsters will probably prevent this from any type of mainstream success, but it should provide opportunities for Akhavan as a filmmaker. Not surprisingly, as an actress, she will be appearing in the next season of "Girls".

    The Persian undercurrent seemed to provide the most potential for a real story of interest, though the focus on bi-sexuality more readily grabs headlines. Shirin's relationship with her parents and the Iranian community offered a chance for illumination and unique exchanges, but unfortunately most of these were glossed over for the next party or pick-up. "Persians communicate mostly through gossip" is a fascinating line that begged for more attention, and Shirin's attempt to come out while talking with her mom was well done and so deserved a follow up.

    Supporting work is provided by Halley Feiffer (daughter of Jules Feiffer) as Shirin's best friend Crystal. Ms. Feiffer steals every scene in which she appears, and had me wanting to learn more about her character. Scott Adsit ("30 Rock") plays the urban-stoner dad who gets Shirin her the teaching job that leads to the "Tale of the Lost Fart" – the turning point for Shirin as she finally reaches the moment when she realizes she has gotten over Maxine. The first film from an exciting new talent always brings a balance of anticipation and a reminder to keep our hopes in check. Here's hoping Desiree Akhavan has more to say.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Desiree Akhavan's directorial film debut. It was also her debut as an actress and writer.
    • Quotes

      Tibet: [Tibet is running an improbably sophisticated film-making class for 10-year-olds] Gracie, would you mind briefing our guest on today's project?

      Grace: We are doing a shot for shot remake of a scene from "The Birds."

    • Connections
      Featured in Women Make Film: A New Road Movie Through Cinema (2018)
    • Soundtracks
      APPROPRIATE BEHAVIOR
      Written and performed by Josephine Wiggs

      Published by Naked Mole Rat Music/BMI

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    FAQ18

    • How long is Appropriate Behavior?Powered by Alexa

    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • March 6, 2015 (United Kingdom)
    • Country of origin
      • United Kingdom
    • Languages
      • English
      • Persian
    • Also known as
      • Appropriate Behaviour
    • Filming locations
      • Brooklyn, New York City, New York, USA
    • Production company
      • Parkville Pictures
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $46,912
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $19,114
      • Jan 18, 2015
    • Gross worldwide
      • $123,699
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 26m(86 min)
    • Color
      • Color

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