Directed by:
Joachim TrierCinematography:
Jakob IhreComposer:
Ola FløttumCast:
Gabriel Byrne, Isabelle Huppert, Jesse Eisenberg, Devin Druid, Rachel Brosnahan, Amy Ryan, Ruby Jerins, David Strathairn, Suzanne Savoy, Leslie Lyles (more)VOD (1)
Plots(1)
Three years after her untimely death, an upcoming exhibition celebrating famed war photographer Isabelle Reed (Isabelle Huppert) brings her eldest son Jonah (Jesse Eisenberg) back to the family home, forcing him to spend more time with his father Gene (Gabriel Byrne) and withdrawn younger brother Conrad (Devin Druid) than he has in years. With the three of them under the same roof, Gene tries desperately to connect with his two sons, but they struggle to reconcile their feelings about the woman they remember so differently. (Soda Pictures)
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Reviews (2)
Death at the beginning; I’d connect this kind of negativism with the North, definitely with the Danish who are outright indulging in these emotional movies. Then, I’d go all the way to France, because it doesn’t really have that much in common with Scandinavian cinematography. It’s not epic enough to even come close and the CGI is at the lowest possible level. In the end, it ended up as French cinematography because it’s inherited its usual chattiness; it drags from the fifth minute until the end itself that is strangely put together and it reflects literally anything else but reality. ()
These just aren't movies I want to watch. I don't want to look at characters who blatantly oppose me, characters who aren't interesting to me in any way, presented in a manner that screams that this is something deserving of at least some small independent recognition. The "dream" scenes here are meaningless. ()
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