That kid was put in
a buddy road trip movie with Hugh Jackman and Patrick Stewart, acted her ass off and totally made the movie.
Not exact matches
; the World Premiere of Chanya Button's debut feature BURN BURN BURN starring Downton Abbey's Laura Carmichael, which takes the
road trip buddy movie on its own smart, female - centric spin; Ali F. Mostafa's FROM A TO B, a «dramedy» following three estranged childhood companions who embark on a
road trip to commemorate the fifth anniversary of a friend's death and offers a new perspective on life in the Gulf and Middle East; Paul Weitz's GRANDMA, a supremely enjoyable «
road movie» starring Lily Tomlin as the gloriously profane septuagenarian whose curt words and emotional armour can't quite mask her broken heart; Bao Nguyen's Saturday Night Live documentary LIVE FROM NEW YORK!
The reason is we didn't have high hope for Patrick Hughes, who directed Expendables 3, and this
road trip buddy movie undoubtedly survives on individual performances (by Ryan Reynolds and Samuel L. Jackson) and character chemistry.
The
buddy movie about Karl Rove and Lee Atwater's college years follows the future political consultants on a cross-country
road trip to Washington, D.C.
So let's say that is indeed what would happen if there was no ice age to wipe out the dinosaurs, the whole
movie is basically a
buddy road trip flick.
A whole lot of plot ensues — an entertaining mix of
buddy movie,
road trip, Clash of the Titans, archetypal quest and a coming - of - age tale about misfits making their way despite, or because of, absent parents.
But this is no documentary, part
road -
trip, part
buddy movie, the two British comedians spend most of the film trying to outdo each others» impressions of Anthony Hopkins and Sean Connery.
Alison Bagnall's Funny Bunny is a shaggy
buddy dramedy about a
road trip that doesn't seem to take its characters much of anywhere, in the tradition of the low - budget American
road movie that must often elide the potentially money - burning
trip undertaken by the protagonists so as to emphasize merely the embarking point and the destination.