It's a cheap, toothless comedy
about a couple whose wedding continues to get postponed for myriad reasons.
It's
about a couple whose tranquil life gets disrupted when guests arrive at their home uninvited.
Showtime's romantic drama,
about a couple whose affair is told from multiple perspectives, remains as gripping, twisting and moving as ever.
The film is
about a couple whose child is killed but they still feel his presence.
Friends with Benefits (R for violence and brief sexuality) Mila Kunis and Justin Timberlake co-star in this romantic comedy
about a couple whose agreement to share intimacy with no expectations does nevertheless lead to relationship complications.
If you don't know them yet, you will: Horgan, 46, along with Rob Delaney, is creator, writer, and costar of Catastrophe (season 3 is available April 28 on Amazon Prime),
about a couple whose one - week stand leads to marriage and children.
Hope Springs is
about a couple whose relationship is the equivalent of old sweatpants — you know, the well - worn pair you hang around the house in and never give much thought to.
In other words, it's a movie
about a couple whose relationship needs some serious dusting off — and really, whose relationship can't use a bit more romance now and then?
As a newlywed, I found that there is something
about couples whose marriages have stood the test of time — thirty, forty, fifty years — that is encouraging for my own, even if their marriages haven't always been perfect.
Not exact matches
Unlike Superman
whose creation can actually be traced back to a
couple of young Jewish men in 1938 for the purpose of providing a sellable fictional story line to Detective Comics, there is no such evidence in regards to religious belief; especially since in this case being that this is
about a God who does not want to be made known but who would rather have us develop our faith.
And this exchange, totally imaginable — perhaps some version of it has occurred in these very United States, between people who couldn't tell John Roberts from the Dread Pirate Roberts — must, when it occurs between two private parties, quickly devolve into an argument
about whose need trumps
whose: the
couple's need for the florist's services, or the florist's need to obey his conscience.
I hear
about a dear young
couple whose baby might be coming home soon and now I've got a little tunic to knit for a beloved and longed - for baby to cast on later this afternoon.
Mihee Kim - Kort is an ordained Presbyterian (PCUSA) minister, mother of three, and prolific writer,
whose books include Making Paper Cranes, Streams Run Uphill, and Yoked (a book co-authored with her husband
about being a clergy
couple).
In response to our coordinate efforts for Mutuality 2012, I have heard from women who say they feel their dignity and worth have been restored, from multiple readers who have changed their minds
about women in ministry, from
couples relieved that they can finally put a name to how their relationship has functioned all along, from singles freshly inspired by the «great cloud of witnesses» that surrounds them, from followers of Jesus
whose passion for justice and equality has been renewed, from women ready to «get on with it» and stop asking permission to use their gifts and start unapologetically using them.
When I get a chance I'll write a
couple of posts — One
about the homeless and Jesus (some dislike churches and Christians, others are Jesus followers, but most like Jesus), and one
about observations the homeless make to us
about the people who show up on their turf to «minister» to them (
whose attitudes range from condescension, which is very common, to love, which is very uncommon).
About 1971, however, there was a major turn in my pilgrimage as I gradually became painfully aware of the so - called outcome studies reporting the dubious effectiveness of average psychotherapy,
whose cure rates barely match spontaneous remission,
coupled with the frightening spectre of client deterioration (i.e., patients finding their condition worsening under the care of professional psychotherapists).
They often include provisions
about religious practices for the
couple and for any children who may arrive; whether or not they plan to have children; what they will do in the case of a pregnancy not wanted by one or the other; what will happen if the
couple decides to separate; what the financial arrangements will be in such a case; what provision will be made for the children; how in - laws, relatives, and friends will be included in the relationship; what sexual practices will be followed; under what circumstances the
couple will move from one home to another;
whose job will take precedence; and what kinds of freedom each partner is to have.
Unfortunately
about a dozen or so issued weak statements that, in fact, served to establish a «conscience» loophole that allowed dissenters to claim that
couples whose consciences did not consider contraception to be wrong in their case, could use contraception without sin.
It started a
couple of days ago when I popped off on my Facebook page
about how much I wished there was a really great marriage conference for people
whose marriages are more like our own — theologians call it «egalitarian» meaning that we believe in a marriage of equals, that we are co-leaders and our marriage is more
about lifting each other up and following Jesus together as one.
As part of the pre-marriage process for the type of wedding we had, we picked three long - time
couples we knew
whose marriages we respected and met with them to discuss all kinds of questions and possibilities
about what we saw for our own relationship.
You said: My comment above on FB was prompted by friends
whose kid is SO entirely dependent on his parents to sleep at night, that he is depriving them of their
couple time and their desperately needed sleep, and as a result, they are constantly frustrated, at odds with each other, and left feeling helpless and misunderstood and «joke»
about divorce.
If you're as selfie - obsessed as so many others seem to be, you might be aware of Chris and Shannon Neuman, the Canadian
couple whose smiling selfie outside the court house, where they were
about to end their 11 - year marriage, went viral.
So how do you know
whose advice to take — if any — when you're bombarded by articles declaring This Marriage Advice Should Be Required Reading For Newlyweds or articles
about couples who've been married 50 or 60 years offering the «secret» to their marital longevity (which is usually some inane thing like «we laugh a lot» or «we have a weekly date.»)?
What
about a loveless, antagonistic
couple whose marriage exists only to get the kids through high school?
Joel and Kathryn Kuhlmann respond to GFI Ezzo attacked this
couple whose pastor had told them to send their questions
about the ministry directly to GFI.
The news story
about the Maryland
couple whose children were temporarily placed in police custody because they espouse «free — range» parenting caused tremendous controversy.
The millionaires tax now only applies to single filers who earn more than
about $ 1 million and married
couples whose combined income exceeds
about $ 2 million.
Rep. Carolyn Maloney (D - Manhattan),
whose district includes Trump Tower, and who led the push for the letter with Donovan, said the group also is concerned
about the future cost of protecting Trump Tower, where First Lady Melania Trump and the
couple's son Barron continue to live.
«The gap between the scale of global ambitions and the scale of national offerings has been clear to the research community for a long time, but the Kyoto Protocol's focus on near - term emissions reductions...
coupled with the scientific focus on long - term stabilization of climate at some unspecified point in the future has long given negotiators an out: they have been able to compare near - term actions without having to square them with long - term goals, rather like guys in a pub arguing
about whose round it is while never actually having to settle up the bill,» Frame said in an email.
Unlike your
coupled - up friends, you don't have to bicker
about whose relatives to spend time with, nor do you have to worry
about fitting in with a partner's family routines.
The findings
about greater happiness in online
couples «are tiny effects,» says Finkel,
whose research published last year found «no compelling evidence» to support dating website claims that their algorithms work better than other ways of pairing romantic partners.
Money and finance is the biggest cause for arguments among American
couples, so get your first date off on the right note and try not to squabble
about whose picking up the dinner bill, sometimes it's just easier for the man to pay - «call me old fashion».
Helena at the Wedding (Unrated) Romance drama
about a newlywed
couple (Lee Tergesen and Melanie Lynskey)
whose New Year's Eve party in the woods for just their closest friends is ruined when it's crashed by an attractive model (Gilliam Jacobs) the groom had developed a crush on at their wedding.
The Garden of Eden (R for profanity, nudity and graphic sexuality) Screen adaptation of the posthumously - published Hemingway novel of the same name
about an American
couple (Jack Huston and Mena Suvari) honeymooning on the French Riviera
whose relationship becomes strained when they both fall in love with a naughty, Italian nymphet (Caterina Murino).
The 1960S - set drama is based on Ian McEwan's novel
about a young
couple on honeymoon
whose decisions haunt them.
Get a Job (Blu - ray + Ultraviolet) Details: 2016, Lionsgate Home Entertainment Rated: R, crude and sexual content, nudity, language, drug use The lowdown: Miles Teller and Anna Kendrick star in this comedy
about a pair of millennials
whose goal is to become a power
couple.
There is nothing conspicuously revolutionary
about the «The Kids Are All Right», a sleek, smart, enormously entertaining film
about a middle - aged lesbian
couple (played by Annette Bening and Julianne Moore)
whose teenage kids seek out the sperm donor who is their biological father (Mark Ruffalo); it has big - name actors, a sun - dappled Los Angeles setting, and the feel of a classic Hollywood comedy at its snappiest.
That isn't meant to give too much heft to a fairly silly and overly episodic comedy
about a Manhattan
couple, Linda (Aniston) and George (Rudd),
whose careers dead - end on the same day.
Goodbye World (Unrated) Apocalyptic dramedy
about a
couple (Adrian Grenier and Kerry Bishe) raising a daughter (Mckenna Grace) in the lap of luxury
whose life is upended when friends descend on their idyllic oasis after a computer virus triggers the collapse of civilization.
A provocative thriller
about Emily and Martin (Rooney Mara and Channing Tatum), a successful New York
couple whose world unravels when a new drug prescribed by Emily's psychiatrist (Jude Law)-- intended to treat anxiety — has unexpected side effects.
Woman Thou Art Loosed: On the 7th Day (PG - 13 for sexuality, profanity, violence, drug and alcohol use, and mature themes) Faith - based drama
about a happily - married
couple (Blair Underwood and Sharon Leal)
whose relationship is suddenly tested by dark secrets uncovered during the desperate search for their kidnapped, 4 year - old daughter (Zoe Carter).
The Happy Sad (Unrated) Bifurcated Brooklyn drama
about two young
couples, one, black and gay (Leroy McClain and Charlie Barnett), the other, white and heterosexual (Cameron Scoggins and Sorel Carradine),
whose lives serendipitously intertwine as they explore their sexual identity.
Little Men (PG for smoking, mature themes and mild epithets) Coming - of - age drama, set in Brooklyn,
about a
couple of teen BFFs (Theo Taplitz and Michael Barbieri)
whose friendship is tested by the tension between their parents locked in a landlord - tenant battle over the rent.
He devised the story —
about a Niagara Falls
couple (Ryan Reynolds and Mireille Enos)
whose young daughter is abducted and held prisoner for eight years by a foppish psychopath (Kevin Durand)-- and his screenplay, co-written with TV - movie vet David Fraser, employs his usual structural gamesmanship, leaping to and fro in time and withholding crucial details.
Other titles in this section include: Naomi Kawase's sweet, light and leisurely AN; Tom Geens»
COUPLE IN A HOLE, about a couple living in an underground forest dwelling to be left alone to deal with their mysterious grief; DEPARTURE, Andrew Steggall's delicate first feature about longing, loneliness and nostalgia for a sense of family that may have never existed; Jacques Audiard's Palme d'Or - winner about a makeshift family trying to cement their bonds, DHEEPAN; the World Premiere of Biyi Bandele's FIFTY, a riveting exploration of love and lust, power and rivalry and seduction and infidelity in Lagos; the European Premiere of Maya Newell's documentary GAYBY BABY, following the lives of four Australian children whose parents all happen to be gay; Mark Cousins returns to LFF with his metaphysical essay film I AM BELFAST, Stig Björkman's documentary INGRID BERGMAN — IN HER OWN WORDS, a treasure trove of Bergman's never - before - seen home movies, personal letters and diary extracts alongside archive footage; Hirokazu Kore - eda's beautiful OUR LITTLE SISTER, focusing on the lives of four young women related through their late father in provincial Japan; the European Premiere of Mabel Cheung's sweeping Chinese epic based on the true story of Jackie Chan's parents A TALE OF THREE CITIES and Guillaume Nicloux's VALLEY OF LOVE starring Isabelle Huppert and Gérard Depardieu in a tale of love, loss, memory and the mys
COUPLE IN A HOLE,
about a
couple living in an underground forest dwelling to be left alone to deal with their mysterious grief; DEPARTURE, Andrew Steggall's delicate first feature about longing, loneliness and nostalgia for a sense of family that may have never existed; Jacques Audiard's Palme d'Or - winner about a makeshift family trying to cement their bonds, DHEEPAN; the World Premiere of Biyi Bandele's FIFTY, a riveting exploration of love and lust, power and rivalry and seduction and infidelity in Lagos; the European Premiere of Maya Newell's documentary GAYBY BABY, following the lives of four Australian children whose parents all happen to be gay; Mark Cousins returns to LFF with his metaphysical essay film I AM BELFAST, Stig Björkman's documentary INGRID BERGMAN — IN HER OWN WORDS, a treasure trove of Bergman's never - before - seen home movies, personal letters and diary extracts alongside archive footage; Hirokazu Kore - eda's beautiful OUR LITTLE SISTER, focusing on the lives of four young women related through their late father in provincial Japan; the European Premiere of Mabel Cheung's sweeping Chinese epic based on the true story of Jackie Chan's parents A TALE OF THREE CITIES and Guillaume Nicloux's VALLEY OF LOVE starring Isabelle Huppert and Gérard Depardieu in a tale of love, loss, memory and the mys
couple living in an underground forest dwelling to be left alone to deal with their mysterious grief; DEPARTURE, Andrew Steggall's delicate first feature
about longing, loneliness and nostalgia for a sense of family that may have never existed; Jacques Audiard's Palme d'Or - winner
about a makeshift family trying to cement their bonds, DHEEPAN; the World Premiere of Biyi Bandele's FIFTY, a riveting exploration of love and lust, power and rivalry and seduction and infidelity in Lagos; the European Premiere of Maya Newell's documentary GAYBY BABY, following the lives of four Australian children
whose parents all happen to be gay; Mark Cousins returns to LFF with his metaphysical essay film I AM BELFAST, Stig Björkman's documentary INGRID BERGMAN — IN HER OWN WORDS, a treasure trove of Bergman's never - before - seen home movies, personal letters and diary extracts alongside archive footage; Hirokazu Kore - eda's beautiful OUR LITTLE SISTER, focusing on the lives of four young women related through their late father in provincial Japan; the European Premiere of Mabel Cheung's sweeping Chinese epic based on the true story of Jackie Chan's parents A TALE OF THREE CITIES and Guillaume Nicloux's VALLEY OF LOVE starring Isabelle Huppert and Gérard Depardieu in a tale of love, loss, memory and the mystical.
Mexican auteur Carlos Reygadas picked up the coveted best director award for Post Tenebras Lux, an experimental drama
about a
couple on a high - end sex holiday,
whose children experience strange dreams.
, director Darren Aronofsky's horror thriller
about a married
couple (Jennifer Lawrence and Javier Bardem)
whose home is besieged by strangers.
We just mentioned The Girl on the Train earlier today when talking
about the Liam Neeson movie The Commuter — Girl is based on the novel of the same name by Paula Hawkins, and follows a woman
whose problems haunt her after she is pulled into a mystery involving a
couple that she imagines to enjoy the perfect marriage.
Dream House (PG - 13 for violence, terror, sexuality and brief profanity) Psychological thriller
about a married
couple (Daniel Craig and Rachel Weisz)
whose relocation from NYC to a quaint New England town leaves their family the target of the same sadistic killer who had brutally murdered the previous owners of their new home.
Rudo y Cursi (R for sexuality, pervasive profanity and brief drug use) Sports comedy, set in Mexico City,
about a
couple of soccer - playing half - brothers (Gael Garcia Bernal and Diego Luna)
whose sibling rivalry is exacerbated when they're informed by a pro scout that the two of them must compete for one spot on his team.