“ Held my attention as it was an interesting character study. Excellent acting.”
“Yes, as per discussion this would have been a great stage play, but it’s not a bad movie either. Walken is quintessential Walken and Amber Heard is great, she could have been – and we’ve seen ‘lost daugheters’ end up as a cliché.”
“Christopher Walken can still deliver his lines in a way no one else does, his phrasing is fabulous and original. I love the writing for this film and the dinner conversation when everyone talks over one another. (Very Woody Allen or Robert Altman) Nice shots of the Hamptons.”
“This was a very boring film! Sorry that Christopher Walken got roped into this.”
“Enough of the road trips! Too much scenery! Jude had the worst hair I’ve every seen on film.”
Very well written movie, although visually the most interesting moments are the album covers and the Andy Warwhol-like photos on the living room wall.”
“Another dysfunctional family saga. Saved only by Christopher Walken’s performance.”
“One of the best films for people of that age. 60’s or 70’s age. Family dynamics remain constant. Unsolved issues just cycle round and round. Even the shrink was a contributor of negative behavior. Money cannot make you happy but they suffered in style. The visuals in the final credits were great. There is some resolution at the end when Jude heads west, or at least out from that situation.
“Finally a dysfunctional family film I will definitely recommend. Tired of War and Superhero movies. Refreshing change of pace. Thank you”
“Christopher Walken is very talented and I felt he propelled the film.”
“Sorry to say I should have stayed in bed this rainy AM. If I had the energy there might be a lot to analyze about the relationships but I really didn’t care about Jude. Very dysfunctional family. Best part of the production was the album covers showing Christopher Walken through the decades. Best scene was when Corine tells Lucille off. This felt like a vanity piece and vehicle for McGinty’s music. The writer took a bad situation and Jude got better at the end but too long to get there. Walken good as always with that deadpan delivery. Haven’t we had enough of shrinks sleeping with their patients and the ‘violet silk’ wasn’t the ‘velvet frog.’”
“Held my attention, but it sure made me appreciate my functional family.”
“I loved this film. Wise, personal and smart. Beautifully written and great cast. May be my personal favorite film of the year for MEA.”
“Is there a genre for dysfunctional family films? If so this would be one of my favorites. Although the Thanksgiving movie we saw with Peter Bogdanovitch was pretty good.” Ed. Note: The film was entitled COLD TURKEY, 2013.
“I liked the movie as well, although it walks a delicate line between satire (album covers) and serious issues - infidelity, drug use, and the worst Dad ever.”
“My favorite part about this movie was the set decoration and the graphics. (Loved those album covers!) For me, it was a pre-coming of age film. Stuck too long in the same spot before the young woman makes a move away from pop. Interesting that she can only call him pop as she sets out to put a continent between them.”
“I could watch Christopher Walken read the phone book. Yes, he’s a totally reprehensible Dad and Husband so it’s understandable that he’s not a likeable character in a film lacking in likeable characters. Wish we could have seen Jude really sing the Montreal song in LA, would have been a much more hopeful and satisfying ending.”
“Making Walken aware of his own inadequacies as a husband/father doen’t make them acceptable. He still made one mess of a family.”
“Loved all the Sinatra references, and this could have been a great spoof of the music industry, but I guess that’s a different movie.”
“This comes sooooo close to being a really clever movie. Nice characters – great cast in supporting roles – Ann Magnusen and Oliver Platt. Just needed some complexity and depth.”
“OK, not ‘ORDINARY PEOPLE,’ if anything these are very unordinary people, but fun to watch, some clever gags and dialogue.”