So it's
a film about growing older, not old, showing that life lessons happen all the time and aren't dictated by age.
Not exact matches
Local New York - based filmmaker Noah Baumbach has two new
films coming out this year, the first being the wacky While We're Young
about a couple
growing older (see the trailer), and the other being Mistress America, a sort - of - sequel to his 2012
film Frances Ha.
Of the three competition
films I've seen thus far (Tale of Tales and Sea of Trees, I liked Our Little Sister best, a quiet, sweet, and heartbreaking
film about three
grown, co-habitating sisters, who meet their younger fourteen - year -
old sister, Suzu (Suzu Hirose) after their absent father dies, and decide to take her in as one of their -LSB-...]
Where the first
film positioned him as a 6 - year -
old boy who
grew up to be an agent of vague, unspeakable evil after murdering his sister Judith with a kitchen knife, each subsequent entry revealed more
about his backstory.
Set around the holidays, it stars Anna Kendrick as a young woman who, after breaking up with her boyfriend, moves in with her brother (Swanberg), his wife (Melanie Lynskey, who starred in 2012's «Hello I Must Be Going,» another Sundance
film about a girl who gets dumped, goes home and
grows up) and their two - year -
old son.
In a groundbreaking achievement, director Richard Linklater has created cinema history by
filming over the span of twelve years the same cast to tell a story
about a six - year -
old boy
growing up in Texas.
Mistress America is a
film about growing up, feeling in flux, and learning to take risks, but it's also
about the other side of that life arc, as Tracy befriends a 30 - year -
old named Brooke (Greta Gerwig) who's crashing into the brick wall of safer, more formulaic adulthood.
Sharp, funny and dead - on accurate
about the way we live now, «While We're Young» is not a
film about eternal youth but, rather,
about coming to terms with
growing older.
I'd seen this
film a long time ago but when I saw it again this time, I had a much better appreciation of the Aboriginal way of being and the thing that really struck me in this
film was there was a section of the
film where they were going to do this aeroplane song and dance corroboree and they were getting ready for it and you know there are all these Elders and you know very wise and respected Elders you know making their costumes they were gonna wear, talking
about how it was gonna be and in amongst all these people there's little children you know of one 1 or 2 or 3 years
old who were just crawling around and you know watching and listening, trying on their head - dresses and they were completely welcomed into that adult community, there was no sense of, you know this is
grown up business, you kids go off and play which is very much the western model.