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IMDbPro

Adult Beginners

  • 2014
  • R
  • 1h 32m
IMDb RATING
5.6/10
9K
YOUR RATING
Rose Byrne, Bobby Cannavale, Joel McHale, Nick Kroll, Matthew Paddock, and Caleb Paddock in Adult Beginners (2014)
A young, hipster entrepreneur crashes and burns on the eve of his company's big launch. With his entire life in disarray, he leaves Manhattan to move in with his estranged pregnant sister, brother-in-law and three year-old nephew in the suburbs - only to become their manny.  Faced with real responsibility, he may finally have to grow up - but not without some bad behavior first.
Play trailer2:15
1 Video
46 Photos
ComedyDrama

A bankrupt businessman tries to restore good relations with his sister and her family.A bankrupt businessman tries to restore good relations with his sister and her family.A bankrupt businessman tries to restore good relations with his sister and her family.

  • Director
    • Ross Katz
  • Writers
    • Nick Kroll
    • Jeff Cox
    • Liz Flahive
  • Stars
    • Nick Kroll
    • Rose Byrne
    • Bobby Cannavale
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    5.6/10
    9K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Ross Katz
    • Writers
      • Nick Kroll
      • Jeff Cox
      • Liz Flahive
    • Stars
      • Nick Kroll
      • Rose Byrne
      • Bobby Cannavale
    • 32User reviews
    • 49Critic reviews
    • 57Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Videos1

    Official Trailer
    Trailer 2:15
    Official Trailer

    Photos46

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    Top cast42

    Edit
    Nick Kroll
    Nick Kroll
    • Jake
    Rose Byrne
    Rose Byrne
    • Justine
    Bobby Cannavale
    Bobby Cannavale
    • Danny
    Joel McHale
    Joel McHale
    • Hudson
    Matthew Paddock
    Matthew Paddock
    • Teddy
    Caleb Paddock
    Caleb Paddock
    • Teddy
    Paula Garcés
    Paula Garcés
    • Blanca
    Caitlin FitzGerald
    Caitlin FitzGerald
    • Kat
    Jane Krakowski
    Jane Krakowski
    • Miss Jenn
    Mike Birbiglia
    Mike Birbiglia
    • Braden
    Greg Johnson
    • Business Dude
    Bobby Moynihan
    Bobby Moynihan
    • Paul
    Seth Barrish
    Seth Barrish
    • Doctor
    Jason Mantzoukas
    Jason Mantzoukas
    • Herman
    Cara Cooper
    • Real Estate Agent
    Paul Urcioli
    Paul Urcioli
    • Georgia's Dad
    Sarah Steele
    Sarah Steele
    • Sarah
    Josh Charles
    Josh Charles
    • Phil
    • Director
      • Ross Katz
    • Writers
      • Nick Kroll
      • Jeff Cox
      • Liz Flahive
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews32

    5.69K
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    Featured reviews

    6Seraphion

    A smooth and subtle take on relationship drama-comedy

    The story background seems like another classic of s man rebuilding his life after a sudden loss. The main focus on the family and relationship drama feels really nice. The way the movie's script depicts the many small things happening in Jake's life is really nice that it feels so subtle and smooth. The movie literally didn't have any increase or decrease in mood, and just dominantly play on a single track of story development. The smaller things seem unpredictable, although their consequences seem so very predictable once they have come on-screen. The acting overall is quite a good bit. Rose Byrne's acting still feels okay although the character doesn't really need much more development. Nick Kroll really gets the comedy side nicely, just at the right portion. Bobby Cannavale's acting really balances the whole set.
    Gordon-11

    A nice film

    This film tells the story of a high flying entrepreneur who lost everything on the night of his company launch. With nothing under his belt, he goes unannounced to his sister's home to stay a few months. The problem is, he and his sister aren't even close.

    "Adult Beginners" is a fun film. It tells the way Jake slowly reconnects with his sister Justina, who haven't seen each other for a year. In the three months they stay together, they grow closer to each other and even make amends of the troubled past. The topic is dealt with in a light hearted manner so that it's not grim at all, but still provides the emotional roller-coaster amidst the laughters. It highlights the divide between work and family, and makes people reflect on the importance of connecting with your family. It's a nice film to watch.
    CleveMan66

    "Adult Beginners"... a good description for the people who made this movie.

    Rose Byrne and Bobby Cannavale have been dating since 2012 and have made three films together in that time. She's the Australian beauty known for the "X-Men" and "Insidious" films, as well as 2014's "Neighbors" and 2011's "Bridesmaids". He's the tall, dark and handsome actor who played Al Pacino's estranged son in "Danny Collins" (2015), Cate Blanchett's would-be suitor in "Blue Jasmine" (2011) and did a season each of "Nurse Jackie" and "Boardwalk Empire". Together, Byrne and Cannavale have made 2014's "Annie" and 2015's spring releases "Adult Beginners" and "Spy". Now, you may be wondering why I've devoted the opening paragraph of my review of "Adult Beginners" (R, 1:30) to the relationship between two of the movie's stars. Well, it's because that's the most interesting thing about this movie. Nick Kroll (who has had a recurring role on "Parks and Recreation" and has his own show on Comedy Central) came up with the story, and stars in "Adult Beginners" as Jake, a self-centered tech guru whose career gets off track, leading him to move in with his sister, Justine (Byrne) and her husband, Danny (Cannavale). Justine, who's expecting her second child, and Danny, who's building the young family a new home, let Jake earn his keep (and saves them some money) by providing day care for their 3-year-old son, Teddy (played by twins Caleb and Matthew Paddock). Jake is predictably inept at taking care of the lad, but he isn't the only adult in the film with an underdeveloped sense of self. Along with Jake, Justine and Danny also feel and act like overgrown kids, or… adult beginners.

    The film's title actually refers to the fact that Jake and Justine never learned to swim, but they end up taking little Teddy to a swim class taught by Miss Jenn (Jane Krakowski), who encourages them to take an adult beginners swim class. Other familiar faces that pop up in minor roles include Josh Charles ("The Good Wife") as Jake's prospective employer, Joel McHale ("Community") as Jake's shallow best friend and Bobby Moynihan ("SNL"), who plays a socially awkward former high school classmate of Jake's. After riding a pretty steep learning curve, and with the help of fellow nanny, Blanca (Paula Garcés), Jake starts to get the hang of being Teddy's nanny, but being in his sister's home for a period of months exposes him to some family drama that he would rather have avoided, but has to deal with.

    "Adult Beginners" wants to be a poignant reflection on what it means to be an adult, and make us laugh in the process. It fails on both counts. The conversations and scenes meant to deliver the movie's message are few, far between and not really integral to the other goings-on. The jokes are not few and far between, but they're also not very funny. The cast member who comes closest to amusing is Moynihan, but only in two brief scenes. The three main adult characters are unsympathetic and the actors playing them are uncharismatic. Cannavale, who has done some great work over the past couple years, unconvincingly bounces back and forth between clueless and angry. Byrne, whose career has had as many misses as hits, was funnier in "Neighbors" – and that ain't saying much. Kroll sleepwalks through his role, a self-absorbed sad-sack, a la Adam Sandler, but not as entertaining. McHale and Krakowski could have brightened things up a bit, but instead are relegated to thankless roles that make almost no use of their considerable comedic talents.

    The scenes depicting Jake's struggles with his new position as glorified babysitter are uninspired and the other gags involving kids aren't only unfunny, they're offensive, that is, unless you find pregnant women getting drunk, couples having sex while toddlers are left to fend for themselves and frequent swearing in front of small children to be humorous. And speaking of the language in this movie, I'm no prude and I think that some well-placed cussing can even be pretty funny, but this script drops f-bombs and other colorful words like they're going out of style. The foul language doesn't advance the plot, doesn't make the movie any funnier and seems to have pointlessly saddled this film with an unnecessarily restrictive MPAA rating. This film gives us too little of what could have made it entertaining, too much of what distracted from its potential and makes me think the title would be better used to describe the people who made this movie. "Adult Beginners" gets a "D".
    5Aktham_Tashtush

    It's not really a Comedy than it is a Drama movie... the trailer was kinda misleading but overall the movie was just okay to be watched .

    The movie starts really slow ,, not much comedy to laugh at ,, but the plot grows gradually until it peaks after the swimming pool "adult beginners" thingy. The screenplay is just okay ,, the writing seems to be getting involved much more with the drama than it is with the comedy ,, not much excitement or unpredictability, you can easily know where things are going in the movie. Honestly, the trailer was kinda misleading with all of these funny bits which seem to reflect the 5% comedy in the movie.

    As for the cast, Nick Kroll and Rose Byrne performances was fine they reflected the depressed newly parent pregnant woman and post- failing business guy. For me ,, and as a supposedly comedy movie,, the scenes with Jason Mantzoukas, Bobby Moynihan and Joel McHale had much more comedy and "giggles" than the leads.

    Overall,, the movie wen just okay,, for me it deserves no higher than 5 as a rating the IMDb average rating by 1,518 users is 5.5 which seems close enough ;)
    4StevePulaski

    Impossibly low stakes make for a seriously unremarkable affair

    For most independent drams helmed by either the Duplass brothers Jay and Mark, or their production company aptly named "Duplass Brothers Productions," the stakes are relatively low for the characters. The films are human dramas centered around realism, naturalism in the acting, and complete and total "directness" when it comes to the filming style (this style and approach has gone on to be known as "mumblecore"). Most of the films from this approach have been winning or at least adequate, in my mind, because often times, in addition to exploring a series of characters, some likable, some not, most of whom, however, real, they give the audience complex ideas to consider and themes to ponder about whilst watching the film. They're almost the "what would you do?" series of films.

    The stakes in Adult Beginners, though, are far too low. At not even ninety minutes, the film races past and forgets to have anything potentially threatening or contemplative happen. Even for this eclectic and minimalist genre, it's a shell of a film that has an idea, characters, and potential, though it forgets the lemon and lime to its custard.

    The story concerns a hipster entrepreneur named Jake (Nick Kroll), who moves in with his estranged, pregnant sister Justine (Rose Byrne) following the failure of his company on the eve of its big launch. The company was said to usher in a whole new world of technological progress, but when a deal with the developer fell through during the celebration, millions of dollars from investors were lost and, in just twelve hours, Jake went from being a renowned innovator to a complete fraud. Justine lives with her husband Danny (Bobby Cannavale) and their three-year-old son in the suburbs, and, in an effort to rebound Jake on his feet, Justine and Danny pay Jake to babysit their son. As expected, this is easier said than done and Jake winds up struggling to keep up with their child. On top of that, Danny is harboring a secret, Justine is secretly depressed and desperate for some kind of social interaction and companionship, and Jake's narcissism is addressed all while the three souls search for some level of contentment in their routine lives.

    This scenario isn't foreign to many mumblecore and contemporary independent films in America. Adult Beginners tackles familiar ideas of post-college disillusionment and the cruel realization of many narcissists (or general workaholics) that their ways of life have, in turn, paved a path for them that includes alienation from the ones they love, high stress-levels, recurring sadness, and a lack of free time to indulge in activities that were once top priority for them.

    The problem is, with that sole paragraph, I developed the characters in this film more than director Ross Katz or writers Jeff Cox and Liz Flahive do. The film meanders on, with impossibly low stakes for the characters, drama that never gets serviced or fizzles before it can really develop, and, in turn, a film that finds itself plodding along in a manner that doesn't make it that funny on a comedic level or that investing on a dramatic level. Adult Beginners is keen with waiting for something happen to it rather than making something happen to the characters or their situations.

    The performers here have proved themselves capable, and to be fair, they're not the reason this project is so mediocre. While Kroll executes the lacking charm of an egotist, Byrne does some of her best work here by simply being a likable and emotionally honest presence. She doesn't decorate her character in theatrics or impossibly unreal beauty where she looks glamorous going out to get her mail in the morning. She's an honest, overworked, and under-appreciated young mother, who leads a great marriage, though that's about it. Her likability and relatability is high here and she dazzles from her first moment on screen. Finally, there's Cannavale, another fun and charismatic presence in nearly everything he's done (particularly Danny Collins as of late), and his character's duality here - though contrived and a bit of a wrench in the story - is the most daring Adult Beginners is throughout its entire story.

    As stated, this is like a main-course without any kind of flavorful zest or kick to make it come alive. At most, it's a completionist film for its genre and the Duplass brothers' productions. Where Adult Beginners could've explored the idea of unfit adults getting ready to own the title in their daily activities by raising kids, holding jobs, and assimilating to mainstream culture - as the story and the genre suggests - it settles for something lower than bare minimum, which is its existence.

    Starring: Nick Kroll, Rose Byrne, Bobby Cannavale, and Joel McHale. Directed by: Ross Katz.

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Rose Byrne and Bobby Cannavale are a real life couple.
    • Goofs
      When Jake and Justine take Teddy for swimming classes the first time, Miss Jenn (swimming instructor) throws a blue colored toy float towards Jake as a sarcasm for his fear of cold water. In the next scene we see that toy float between open arms of Jenn instead of being near Jake or Teddy.
    • Quotes

      Blanca: Do you always bring your pregnant sister on dates?

      Jake: Just when I want to guarantee I won't get laid.

    • Connections
      Featured in The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon: LL Cool J/Rose Byrne/Big Sean (2015)
    • Soundtracks
      Follow the Rainbow
      Performed by Tom Quick

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    FAQ18

    • How long is Adult Beginners?Powered by Alexa

    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • April 24, 2015 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Official site
      • Official Facebook
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Yetişkin Çaylaklar
    • Filming locations
      • New York, USA
    • Production companies
      • Burn Later Productions
      • Duplass Brothers Productions
      • Good At Business
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $108,808
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $36,657
      • Apr 26, 2015
    • Gross worldwide
      • $108,808
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 32m(92 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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